Can you detail some of the rock solid solutions in 2008 for the problems addressed? For example, building multiple C++ packages from source. Google's Bazel wasn't open sourced until 2015, so solutions were still appearing long after 2008.
I feel that many of these legal arguments have not caught up with modern technology. If we had had the capabilities we have today 100 years ago, I am sure the lawyers would have pushed for maximum recording of all things. But face to face discussions are some how grandfathered in.
How is this any different than in-person conversations that are not recorded? Should companies be required to record all conversations that happen face to face?
I am thinking about the end application. All the more reason to ignore all of the benefits of a web solution and spin the highest performance version. Because performance is critical when viewing tons of cameras and lidar with near-realtime playback.
I have a serious question. Should this be a web visualization? Doesn't all the abstraction lead to performance hits? Tons of data needs to be pulled off the hard drive, network, RAM and shoved into the graphics card. Is putting a web browser in the middle of that pipeline the most efficient use of resources? I feel like it is a hammer situation.
https://youtu.be/zm_rlLyelQo