I see news stories that will give examples of how much energy a type of technology uses (usually AI or crypto). They’ll claim very big numbers like the whole ecosystem using “as much as a small country” or one instance of use being “as much as an average home uses in a year.”

With the crypto ecosystem being so big and I’m less inclined to defend it, I haven’t thought as much about the claims. But with AI while it still has problematic aspects, it also has a lot of useful applications. When I run a single query the idea it’s the same energy as driving my car ten miles or whatever doesn’t seem to pass the smell test.

How are these numbers generated? Historically media doesn’t do great with science reporting (“a cure for cancer was just invented” etc) so just trying to get some context/perspective.

  • fr0g@feddit.de
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    9 months ago

    But with AI while it still has problematic aspects, it also has a lot of useful applications.

    Ah yes, stealing content en masse and polluting the whole internet with junk content in the hopes of being able to monopolize entire industries. Peak usefulness.

    (There are of course many useful applications of AI in general. But they also tend to not burn through as much energy and processing power as LLMs)

    • LesserAbe@lemmy.worldOP
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      9 months ago

      I use an LLM pretty much every day to assist with software development. I find it to be very useful.

    • Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Yeah, yeah, that’s what they said about the steam engine, and… Oh, it did exactly what you said. Nevermind.