Which is what Netflix and anyone streaming pre-recorded video does.. you proclaimed in the other thread Netflix doesn't, and that nobody would :"want to."
Now you are gaslighting me.
Have a day.
Netflix is a bit different. They aren't using old 'encode in advance, deliver to consumer' H264/5. There are products that use 'encode in advance' h265/4, like the iTunes TV/Movie store. The existence of them has no relevance to Stadia, though.
Encoding in advance and delivering that to consumers has a long list of disadvantages that are not incurred by encode-on-demand methods of delivery. Just one of the issues in play is the ability to digitally watermark delivered content, for anti-piracy purposes. Another (this one relevant to Netflix) is supporting quality levels in a meaningful way - unless one wants to encode to every possible resolution and frame rate, it makes a lot more sense to dynamically generate what each user needs and retain only the most commonly streamed versions, generating the others as needed. Netflix is built upon H264/5 live streaming technologies. When a user starts a stream, they may or may not receive an existing encoded version of a piece of content or they may receive a new, encoded-on-demand version. Generally a user watching content over a cellular network will receive both over the course of their viewing session, going back and forth based on network speed. The type of device they are watching on and the resolution and frame rate they are watching at is just one factor of many that is used in determining by Netflix what to deliver.
There are advantages posed by encoding in advance - lower file size for consumers, lower computational demands for the business - but consumers have clearly expressed that they don't care about those advantages each and every time they stream an HLS product.
You'd know all of this, if you understood the subject you are posting about in any real way. Netflix didn't build out an infrastructure of fairly serious computational strength around the world just to encode some shows, save them to disk, and serve that file to consumers when they request a stream. Think!