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Suddenly, a small, grumpy cat fell from the top of his screen. It landed on the taskbar. It looked left. It looked right. And then, it began to march across the screen, exactly as Leo had drawn it. Juq722rmjavhdtoday022416 Min — Portable

He realized that the program didn't know how to "see" his art; it only knew how to read a specific set of instructions. Natasha Nixx Stripper Sucks You Off Link

Leo loved the idea of —those little desktop mascots that crawl around your screen, climb the sides of your monitor, and multiply when you aren't looking. Leo had a specific character in mind: a grumpy little cat named "Biscuit" who he wanted to trip over his browser windows and nap in the corner of his screen.

Leo found a sprite sheet online, opened his art program, and eagerly drew forty different poses of Biscuit. But when he tried to load them into the program, nothing happened. The cat was invisible. The program crashed.

He realized this was for animation. If he wanted Biscuit to walk, he couldn't just have one walking pose; he needed two or three that cycled together to create the illusion of movement.