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Current Wacintaki version: 1.6.7
This oekaki deletes inactive accounts after 30 days. Log in regularly to keep your account active.
Oekaki is a Japanese term that roughly translates to “doodle” or “scribble.” On the Internet, oekaki boards are bulletin boards or forums dedicated to drawing pictures that are drawn using a paint program that runs in a web browser. Traditionally, early oekakis were simple pictures drawn with few colors on a canvas measuring 300 × 300 pixels, and they were posted sequentially, rather than in a threaded gallery format. Oekaki boards started showing up on Japanese web sites around 1998, were only available in Japanese, and were often dedicated to anime and video game fan art.
Today, the drawing programs are much more sophisticated and allow more complex drawings of different sizes and in multiple layers, but the oekaki bulletin board format usually remains the same. Oekakis are largely dedicated to original work you have drawn yourself. Photographs or work you did not create yourself are discouraged, and in most cases are not allowed. Some oekaki boards allow you to upload pictures from your computer, but most do not.
The term “oekaki” may refer to both oekaki drawings and an oekaki board. When someone draws an oekaki, they are drawing a picture. When someone draws on an Oekaki, or looks at oekakis, they are usually referring to participating on an oekaki board.
Wacintaki is an oekaki board that may be installed on a personal web site. It is a very traditional oekaki board, with the exception that it requires people to register as members before they may draw. Wacintaki was forked from a previous open-source oekaki known as OekakiPoteto, written by Theo Chakkapark and Marcello Bastéa-Forte. Old versions of the fork were known as Wacintaki Poteto, but now the board is simply named Wacintaki.
If you are interested in installing Wacintkai on your web site, visit the Wacintaki home page or the NineChime software support forum for more information.
Wacintaki requires registration before you may draw. If you are registered, you may begin drawing by clicking on “Draw” on the menu bar. Note that administrators may revoke your ability to draw, revoke your registration, or even ban you at any time if you misbehave.
Oekaki boards allow you to draw pictures with a custom paint program that runs in your web browser. Some oekaki boards will also allow you to upload an image from your computer, but this is at the discression of the oekaki owner. Some oekaki boards will allow all members to upload files, however, most boards will only allow specific members to upload. Please check the board rules before asking for the ability to upload images.
Some paint programs allow you to record your actions as you draw, so other members may see how you work. After clicking “Draw” on the menu bar, you will be given an option to enable animations. Note that some paint programs do not support animations, but they may require you to click the animation option if you want to draw your picture in multiple layers.
Animations will only show your actions while drawing. You cannot create cartoons or videos, or edit the animations. If you click “undo” in a paint program, your last action will not show up in the animation.
Most of the paint programs are Java applets. If your web browser says it does not have the correct plug-in, try downloading Java from www.Java.com. Java is a software platform created by Sun Microsystems and is now distributed by Oracle.
Many PCs already have Java installed. Java on the Macintosh is provided by Apple, and is known to have problems running the oekaki applets.
Older versions of Java have problems importing pictures, so make sure you are using a recent version of Java. You may also have to enable animation support to retouch pictures. If you are retouching a complex picture with a long animation, you may have to wait a minute before the picture will show up in the canvas as the paint program loads the animation.
You may recover your password here.
If you can't get your password back with password recovery, tell the owner of the board, and he or she can give you a new password.
This is likely a web browser problem. You should empty your browser cookies. A cookie is a small tag of information that lets a server know who you are. Most browsers have an option to clear cookies from the “Tools->Options” menu.
Your picture may not be lost. If the picture finished uploading, but you were unable to comment, go to “Administration->Recover Pics” to recover it. Your information has still saved, including the time it took for you to draw it. If you have trouble, the administrator may recover pictures for you, or upload a screen capture you took using the “Print Scrn” key.
NOTE: Pictures saved using a screen capture may be very large and in a format not compatible with Wacintaki. Please tell an administrator about your lost picture before sending a huge picture file to an admin's e-mail address.
To help protect e-mail addresses from spam, you must be logged into your account to see other peoples' addresses in their profile or the memberlist.
You will always be able to see admin e-mails, but you will have to substitute the anti-spam character with the “@” symbol.
Wacintaki allows administrators to disable the chat and mailbox systems normally found in OekakiPoteto. The chat system uses a lot of bandwidth and some servers may not be able to use it. If the mailbox has been disabled, you may send e-mails to people directly by viewing that person's profile or the memberlist. Note that you must be a member and logged in to see e-mail addresses.
Click on member names to open up their profiles, and click on “send a message” at the top of that page. You must be logged into your account to send messages.
If it is set, at a specific date, all users who haven't logged in within the specified time will automatically be removed from the board. To prevent this from happening, ask an administrator to give you an Immunity flag, or log into the board on a regular basis.
As oekaki is an international passtime, the definition of an adult picture varies. Usually this means any material of a mature nature, suitable only for people at least 18 years of age. This material includes aggressive violence, nudity, or anything of a sexual or explicit nature. Some oekaki boards do not allow adult content, so read the rules to see if any additional or alternative conditions have been specified by the administrators.
If an oekaki board has been rated for adults only, you must submit an age statement before you may register. If you cannot view adult pictures and would like to see them, you must select “Edit Profile,” and make sure the “Allow Adult Images” checkbox is selected.
Images become thumbnails based on a number of factors, including the filesize of your image, and what thumbnail mode the administrator has selected for the board. You may change thumbnail and layout modes in “Edit Profile” if the administrator allows members to choose their own view modes.
~ Meina