there will still be a single .dll on an old hard drive, buried in a backup named final_final_3 .
They will be right. And they will never know the wars that were fought in IETF meeting rooms, the drafts, the objections, the last-minute concessions, just to make that wget work at all. after everything openh264
Just the frame we finally stopped trying to send. there will still be a single
No one will remember why it was needed. No ticket, no Slack thread, no RFC. Just a checksum and a vague memory: "We had to ship something that played video on those old Chinese phones." Just the frame we finally stopped trying to send
And somewhere, in a forgotten Dockerfile , a RUN wget command will point to a 404. The build will fail at 3 AM. Some on-call engineer will sigh, comment out the layer, and push a fix titled "remove openh264, nobody uses that format anymore."
The binary will sit there, unsigned now, its certificate long since blinked out of existence like a dead star whose light still travels.
No compression. No negotiation. No profile or level.