{
  "video": "video-8f82b00b.mp4",
  "description": "The video you provided appears to be a screen recording of a **Grafana dashboard**, a popular open-source platform for monitoring and visualizing metrics.\n\nHere is a detailed breakdown of what is visible in the video:\n\n### Overall Interface\n*   **Title/Context:** The dashboard is titled \"Website performance.\"\n*   **Navigation:** There is a standard navigation bar at the top showing \"Home,\" \"Dashboards,\" and \"Website performance.\"\n*   **Filtering:** Users can select a time range using a dropdown labeled \"Go to / from...\" and there is a setting for \"Go to **48 hours**.\"\n*   **Layout:** The dashboard is highly technical, composed of numerous charts, graphs, and metric displays, suggesting it is used by DevOps, system administrators, or software engineers to monitor the health and performance of a website or application.\n\n### Key Panels and Metrics (Sections)\n\nThe dashboard is organized into several distinct sections:\n\n**1. Resource Usage (Top Left - Memory and CPU)**\n*   **Memory / CPU:** A stacked area chart shows trends over time (from 16:00 to 17:45, and continuing across the time axis). This chart monitors memory usage and CPU usage, broken down by different processes or containers (e.g., `web_server_01`, `web_server_02`, etc.). The colors indicate different components contributing to the load.\n\n**2. System & Performance Indicators (Top Center)**\n*   **Ingress:** A line graph showing incoming traffic or requests over time.\n*   **Latency:** Another line graph tracking response time or delay.\n*   **Memory:** A gauge or card showing a current memory metric, currently displaying **114.8 B** (though the unit \"B\" seems unusual for modern memory metrics and might be a placeholder or a specific measurement unit in this context).\n\n**3. Google Hits (Top Right)**\n*   A section titled \"Google Hits\" displays data in a card format, likely related to search engine indexing or tracking:\n    *   **Support calls:** A metric shown as **57.1**.\n    *   A table below shows various metrics (e.g., `0.400`, `27.7`, `37.1`, `66.5`, `21.2`) categorized under \"A entries,\" \"B entries,\" \"C entries,\" and \"D entries.\"\n\n**4. Server Requests (Middle Section)**\n*   **Server requests:** A detailed line graph tracking the volume of server requests over time (from 16:00 to 17:45). This shows the fluctuating load on the backend servers.\n\n**5. Summary Cards (Middle Right)**\n*   This section repeats or summarizes key performance indicators:\n    *   **Support calls:** Displaying **114.8 B**.\n    *   **Sign ups:** Displaying **57.1**.\n    *   **Google hits:** Displaying detailed metrics like `0.400`, `27.7`, etc., again in a segmented view.\n\n**6. Client-Side Performance (Bottom Section)**\n*   **Client side full page load:** A set of bar charts is displayed along the bottom, tracking how long it takes for a full webpage to load, broken down across different time intervals. These bars are color-coded, likely indicating different performance tiers or components of the page load.\n\n### Conclusion\nIn summary, the video is a comprehensive **monitoring interface (Grafana)** providing deep, real-time (or near real-time) insights into the operational health, resource utilization (CPU/Memory), and performance metrics (Latency, Load Times) of a website infrastructure. It is a tool used for proactive performance management and debugging.",
  "codec": "av1",
  "transcoded": true,
  "elapsed_s": 19.1
}