The intended presentation is that the animations are displayed without access to the underlying GIF files, so that there is no way to tell a dot blinks besides waiting.
The intended presentation of this Bongard Problem is that the solver just sees the animations on a screen (and doesn't have access to the files), so that there is no way to tell a dot blinks besides waiting.
The intended presentation of this Bongard Problem is that the solver just sees the animations on a screen (and doesn't have access to the files), so that there is no way to tell a dot blinks besides waiting.
The intended presentation of this Bongard Problem is that the solver just sees the animations on a screen (and doesn't have access to the files), so that there is no way to tell a dot will blink besides waiting.
In the intended presentation of this Bongard Problem, the solver should just see the animations on a screen (and not have access to the files), so that there is no way to tell a dot will blink besides waiting.