I'm familiar with the idea of parallax, to be sure. But not the optical solutions to it, to be sure.
The solutions to it are either a parallax adjustment feature, shooting at the distance a fixed parallax scope is set to, or keeping your eye perfectly aligned with the center of the scope.
Seems like it's a "moving target" sort of problem after watching that vid... at every distance the adjustment has to change?
Yes and no. If one requires precision, the parallax should be adjusted to the distance one is shooting. If only "minute of tin can" accuracy is required, a parallax adjustment isn't really needed under most circumstances.
A simple trick to minimize error with a fixed parallax scope: 1. While sighting, position your eye far enough back from the scope so that a black "ring" appears at the outer edge of the field of view.
2. Center the reticle within this black ring as you take your shot.
The above ensures that your eye is very close to the center line of the scope, minimizing parallax error.