I showed Raj the progress. He is excited. Now that we have a device, I told Raj whatever features he wants, he can now implement. He's an engineer. I will say one more time, what is the Wi-Fi? Santa Fi and Oliver is a doe. D-O-U-G-H. The history behind this is there was a, there was an ad. I found a smoothie store that a friend introduced. It delivers. But at like quadruple price. Is it? Okay, so. Actually, maybe only like 50% markup. Omakase is 42 bucks. Do they have the Omakase in the investigator? We've got it delivered before. What is it? The Mommy Sushi Bistro? Oliver is a D-O-U-G-H. D-O-U-G-H. Okay, loading the sushi. Lion King roll. If there's sushi, like the Omakase is truly the only thing that's good on there. Brandon, what is this page? I don't know. I don't know. I don't know any of them really. This, this, this, and this. And this. And this. The top one is a scallop. Yeah, it has a scallop. Okay, maybe I remember wrong. The pricing is not. What else? Yuzu might be able to find the fish. I don't think so. Fish are too hard to find. Maybe you should continue. They try to explain it to you at the store, but they have such a hard accent and it's too loud. Yeah. You can't ever understand. Yeah, yeah. You just nod and say, okay. Alright, let's see. Okay. On to some actual tangibles, I guess. Do you want to run the meeting or should I run the meeting? I was just going to go through a bunch of technical things, like what the post-processing pipeline we need is and shit. Also, post-processing. Yeah, yeah. Here, do you want to drive the TV? Okay. Yeah, do you want to do that first? Just 15 minutes of doing that. Because there are a lot of good features that I have not introduced to them yet that you should introduce to them. Classic. Then it has real HDMI, so you can unplug the HDMI adapter. Some of us specifically select for computers with HDMI and USB-A. I think the remote for the TV is somewhere over there. I should also order myself some dinner. It is infrared remote controls. You have to point it at the logo. Here, give it to me. Oh, that corner. Usually it's at the logo. I need to get a fresh 90-inch TV. This one seems to have burned in. Did we lose the left half of the display? I think the liquid crystals might be leaking. Okay, it's not too bad. It's still the same. I don't know what that burned-in spot is from. Come on, you can do it. We can maximize the pixels for you. What is going on? What is going on? This is a reasonable computer. This is running Yuhantu and everything. Maybe Ubuntu is the problem. It's bugging out on that monitor, not on this monitor. I can still use it. Try again. I think the inside and outside displays are both 1080p, so reset them to mirror. You can have a good presenting experience. Meanwhile, Kelly is focused on her fish. She's looking carefully at the different mackerels. It's amazing. Thanks to the power of Yuzu, this interaction will be captured in perpetuity, whether you guys want it or not. There we go. It's not bad. I'm going to go through here. I'm H265, but I would be okay to use Havoc or VP9 or whatever. Well, I only say this because this is in their offering, but we could just make a scalable EC2 server. Yeah, I mean I... But this is basically what... Yeah, I see. You're trying to architect this around fully hosted solutions, right? Where everything is external endpoints when possible? Kind of, and then you shouldn't worry about it. I don't want you to necessarily worry about any of that stuff, but I do think that sometimes getting into your... If media encoding and decoding isn't one of those engineering gravel holes that... Yeah, I guess it's true. ...you always have to have an engineer on, then if you could just make it in a Docker container and scale it, that's fine. Yeah. No, I think you're right. It's better to use a hosted service because good media encoding is accelerated by the hardware video encoders on GPUs, so they require very specific instances to run on. They're like A2s or whatever are the ones they run on. Yeah, and they need to be... A few of them need to be on-demand, always on, and then they... Yeah. That's something I can do. I don't know if any of these... Yeah. Pick... I would do either VP9 or Havoc. VP9 is probably a little cheaper because it's royalty-free. All right, so let's scroll up. Let's take a look at the speeds. Down, down to just the speed chart. Like, yeah, this one. So we get for HD, speed optimized. What's the X? What are these multiples of? This is professional tier, but let's... Hmm, this... Okay, this is ridiculous. Let me open the page. AWS Elemental Media Converter. God, AWS has so many services. Yeah, this is actually the one that... Why does AWS... This is the new one, actually. This is the new one. I guess... They've deprecated some old ones. AWS is like Amazon but for digital products. You can buy everything. So I figured encoding, decoding... Let me investigate. This looks like it may not quite be what I want. And then they have only audio normalization and Adobe Vision HDR templates. Frame, former frame rate conversion. They also have... I'm familiar with Amazon Recognition. So you can do video processing and detect things in videos and do some ML on it. And they also use AWS Recognition mainly for the really bad content from malicious actors. Because you know that's a thing. You know where that conversation is going. So it's kind of like a bit of a firewall there to say, hey, we're looking out for that stuff using the whole Amazon Recognition. Yeah, okay. It rejects all harmful content. Let's go investigate this situation. All right, so this is the pricing. So if we're at... Okay, so we have to use VP9. I think VP9 is a gun. Okay, VP9 codec. Okay, so VP9 is HEVC class, so I don't mind. Everything decodes VP9 now. So whatever. The device never has to play back its own footage. So as long as it plays on phones, it's fine. I say this because HEVC costs 10... No? Okay. HEVC costs two times as much because I think they have to pay royalties. So whatever. VP9 is HEVC class. So what are these times? Oh, these are a normalized unit. Oh, I see. Okay, so at 30 frames per second HD video, VP9 HD video is 4X. It's almost one cent per minute. Oof. I mean, for a 60-minute video, that's almost a dollar. Oof. To have Amazon uncompress your video for you. Oof. Let me think. This pricing is probably a reason. And I think you can negotiate discounts and shit. Okay, I'm just discussing the price. I'm not saying we're not using it. I mean, are you open to buying it? Yeah, I'm just... We can take a look. There's also other services, too. I'm not really... If you guys already have an encoding decoding thing... I think it needs... It should be on a hosted service because you pay a lot for the CPU minutes otherwise. Encoding's not cheap. Let's take a look at whether... Are there speeds? I feel like speed is also important. Yeah. Who is the customer for this platform? It seems like it's game streaming. Like, who is... What video studio pays Amazon to produce their TV show? What video studio is like, I have everything except the ability to compress my video. Yeah, yeah. It looks like they're all... Like, two out of the... Yeah, okay. One of them is on-demand TV. One of them is games. Fascinating. All right. As I said, Amazon is Amazon. They sell everything. I mean, this is fine. This is fine. If you think it's good and you know how to use it, we can try it. It's 60 cents an hour, which is pretty whatever in the initial stage. We have credits and an hour is a fair chunk of video. Am I reading this right? It's one cent per minute. Yeah, it's 60 cents an hour.