I'm sure there are smarter ways of doing this, but as gif animations 
usually aren't very large, you can save each frame as a separate image file 
(e.g., in a PICT or BMP format), name them consequtively (e.g., 
frame001.pic, frame002.pic) and then open the entire sequence in QuickTime 
Player (the Pro version). After that, you can export or save in a number of 
video formats. All you need is a $29 QuickTime Pro license--that's  the 
beauty of it.

Slava

At 02:04 PM 7/18/2001 +0700, you wrote:
>       Please help me,
>   I want to combine an animation (gift 15 fps) into a mpeg 1 (25 fps. Can
>you guys shine some light as to what's kind of software(s)and direction in
>approaching this.
>   thanks to some help!


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