Making The Cut S02e06 Openh264 !!install!! ⏰
Gary smiles. “Because now I know how to break the rules. That’s what the code taught me.”
But the twist arrives via a sealed envelope delivered mid-morning. Inside: a USB drive branded with the logo .
But Raf is inconsolable. He locks himself in the fabric storage room and begins cutting up yards of gray flannel, muttering about “the death of the analogue soul.”
OpenH264, as the narrator (voiced with grave intensity by a British actor) explains in a voiceover, is a real, open-source video codec developed by Cisco. It’s used to compress video for web conferencing, streaming, and real-time communication. But in the world of Making the Cut , it’s been reimagined as a proprietary digital weaving algorithm that allows fabric to shift patterns and colors based on the viewer’s angle—essentially, clothing that “streams” different designs in real-time.
Gary smiles. “Because now I know how to break the rules. That’s what the code taught me.”
But the twist arrives via a sealed envelope delivered mid-morning. Inside: a USB drive branded with the logo .
But Raf is inconsolable. He locks himself in the fabric storage room and begins cutting up yards of gray flannel, muttering about “the death of the analogue soul.”
OpenH264, as the narrator (voiced with grave intensity by a British actor) explains in a voiceover, is a real, open-source video codec developed by Cisco. It’s used to compress video for web conferencing, streaming, and real-time communication. But in the world of Making the Cut , it’s been reimagined as a proprietary digital weaving algorithm that allows fabric to shift patterns and colors based on the viewer’s angle—essentially, clothing that “streams” different designs in real-time.