Not the trendy VP9, but the old workhorse—libvpx-VP8. The one nobody used anymore because it wasn’t sexy. But Margaret remembered her grandmother’s advice: “The thing that works quietly is holier than the thing that screams.”
Here’s a short story blending the reflective tone of Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret with the technical thread of (the open-source video codec). Title: Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret. And I’m Encoding. are you there god? it's me, margaret. libvpx
She typed:
ffmpeg -i retreat_raw.mov -c:v libvpx -b:v 1M -crf 10 -deadline good -cpu-used 2 -c:a libvorbis output.webm The terminal blinked. Then—miraculously—it started writing frames. No macroblocking. No dropped frames. Just soft, breathing video, like the retreat’s actual pine forest. Not the trendy VP9, but the old workhorse—libvpx-VP8
The client’s raw footage—six hours of a mindfulness retreat shot on aging RED cameras—refused to compress. Every time she ran the FFmpeg command, the output stuttered like a child faking a cough. H.264 was too blocky. H.265 crashed her RAM. She’d whispered into the dark last night, “Are you there, God? It’s me, Margaret. I need a codec that respects grain structure.” It’s Me, Margaret with the technical thread of
“Thanks,” she whispered. “For libvpx. And for not making me use AV1 today.”