Because the browser must request each frame individually, there is often a slight delay compared to a dedicated H.264/H.265 stream. Frame Rate:
This is the standard playback mode. The viewer renders frames sequentially at a specific framerate (e.g., 24fps, 30fps, 60fps). This creates the illusion of movement. However, this mode suffers from motion blur, judder, and tearing if the hardware cannot keep up. viewerframe mode motion free
This mode disables automatic motion. The user manually advances the timeline. While this stops motion, it is not truly "Motion Free" because navigating between frames can introduce errors like field dominance issues or compression artifacts. Because the browser must request each frame individually,
The phrase "viewerframe? mode=motion" (and its variations like "viewerframe mode motion free") is primarily known as a Google Dork this mode suffers from motion blur