The Denver Post

STEPHEN WILHITE, CREATOR OF THE ANIMATED GIF, DIES AT 74

- — © The New York Times Co.

Stephen E. Wilhite, a computer programmer who was best known for inventing the GIF, the looping animations that became a universal language for conveying humor, sarcasm and angst on social media and in instant messages, died in Cincinnati on March 14. He was 74.

His death, at a hospital, was confirmed Thursday by his wife, Kathaleen Wilhite, who said that the cause was complicati­ons of COVID-19.

In 1987, while Stephen Wilhite was working for Compuserve, the nation’s first online service, he led a team of engineers who revolution­ized how people could share video clips on the internet. They called the format they created a GIF, short for Graphics Interchang­e Format, a type of compressed image file with an ease of use that made it enduring.

The technology’s appeal expanded from computers to smartphone­s, giving the famous and the not-so-famous the ability to share GIFS on platforms such as Twitter and Facebook and eventually to create their own loops. It inspired the famous “dancing baby” GIF in 1996 and popular apps such as Giphy.

“I saw the format I wanted in my head, and then I started programmin­g,” Wilhite told The New York Times in 2013.

That year, Wilhite, who was also a former chief architect for America Online, received a lifetime achievemen­t award at the Webby Awards.

In addition to his wife, Wilhite’s survivors include a son, David; stepchildr­en Rick Groves, Robin Landrum, Renee Bennett and Rebecca Boaz; 11 grandchild­ren; and three great-grandchild­ren.

In 2012, Oxford American Dictionari­es recognized GIF as its “word of the year.”

While the usefulness of Wilhite’s innovation was undisputed, the pronunciat­ion of “GIF” was a frequent subject of debate. Was it pronounced with a hard G sound or a soft one?

“The Oxford English Dictionary accepts both pronunciat­ions,” Wilhite said. “They are wrong. It is a soft G, pronounced ‘jif.’ End of story.”

 ?? via The Associated Press ?? Stephen Wilhite accepts his lifetime achievemen­t award from the Webby Awards in May 2013 in New York. Webby Awards,
via The Associated Press Stephen Wilhite accepts his lifetime achievemen­t award from the Webby Awards in May 2013 in New York. Webby Awards,

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