Let’s break down what this means and why it matters for your workflow. Traditionally, viewers operate in Keyframe mode . When you stop moving your mouse or finger, the system asks: "Where is the user now?" It then jumps to the nearest discrete frame. This causes "popcorn" motion—jerky, discrete jumps that hurt the eyes.
When you scrub through a 4K video timeline, rotate a 3D CAD model, or fly through a point cloud, you are engaging with a concept rarely discussed outside of graphics engineering circles: . viewerframe mode motion
Unlocking Smooth Visuals: A Deep Dive into ViewerFrame Mode Motion Let’s break down what this means and why
If you have ever felt that a video player was "laggy" or that a 3D viewer was "stuttering," you were judging the quality of its ViewerFrame mode. This causes "popcorn" motion—jerky