In conversation, when I was describing the effect, it occurred that there could be an application for it as a surveillance tool. It compresses frames both spatially and temporally so image sequences can be monitored more efficiently, at a higher rate and with individually modifiable layers. The images themselves are not compressed, the sequence is (however the sample above was further compressed several times by the publishing platform.)
A piece I did a few years back to model fluid-like architectures that had some kind of structural resonance with a way of being interrelated, or somehow mutually co-inherent.