CAD Touch is a Pro CAD solution that completely reinvents on-site drawing, giving to professionals in various core fields like architecture, engineering, real estate, home design and more, the power to measure, draw and view their work on-site.
For the uninitiated, libvpx is an open-source video codec developed by Google (behind VP8/VP9), often used in WebM containers. It’s known for efficient, royalty-free streaming. So why does it matter in a crime thriller?
Here’s a short, interesting write-up on and its use of libvpx , written in an engaging, tech-meets-plot style. Cross S01E06: When the Stream Pixelates, So Does the Truth Episode 6 of Cross doesn’t just turn up the psychological heat—it subtly introduces a technical signature that sharp-eyed viewers might miss: libvpx . cross s01e06 libvpx
One of those blocks holds the killer’s reflection. For the uninitiated, libvpx is an open-source video
In S01E06, as Cross digs deeper into encrypted communications from the killer, the show’s production cleverly uses —blockiness, temporal smearing, and color banding—to simulate degraded surveillance footage, dark-web video calls, and corrupted memory cards. That visual “crunch” isn’t an accident. It’s libvpx running in constrained bitrate mode, mimicking real-world forensic video recovery. Here’s a short, interesting write-up on and its
So in episode 6, libvpx isn’t just a codec—it’s a . The rough edges in the video aren’t post-production glitches; they’re clues. And Cross, ever obsessive, pauses on a frame that breaks into 8x8 transform blocks.
One scene in particular—a low-light parking garage recording—shows libvpx’s trade-off: motion stays readable, but fine details (license plates, faces) dissolve into pixel squares. Cross squints at the screen. So do we.
Why libvpx instead of H.264 or HEVC? Because the show’s tech consultant wanted : open-source codecs appear more often in burner devices and DIY streaming tools used by criminals avoiding licensing trails.
CAD Touch was discontinued in 2018.
Thanks to over 2.5 million users for using CAD Touch (launched in November 2008 as the very first mobile phone CAD application ever) for all these great years together!
Martin