• tal@lemmy.today
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    28 days ago

    So, first, that’s just a reduction. But set that aside, and let’s talk big picture here.

    My GPU can use something like 400 watts.

    A human is about 100 watts constant power consumption.

    So even setting aside all other costs of a human and only paying attention to direct energy costs, if an LLM running on my GPU can do something in under a quarter the time I can, then it’s more energy-efficient.

    I won’t say that that’s true for all things, but there are definitely things that Stable Diffusion or the like can do today in a whole lot less than a quarter the time it would take me.

    • milicent_bystandr@lemm.ee
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      28 days ago

      That said, the LLM isn’t running an array of bonus functions like breathing and wondering why you said that stupid thing to your Aunt’s cousin 15 years ago and keeping tabs on your ambient noise for possible phone calls from that nice boy who promised to call you back.

    • Traister101@lemmy.today
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      28 days ago

      Chat GPT can output an article in a much shorter time than it’d take me to write one but people would probably like mine more

    • wischi@programming.dev
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      28 days ago

      The problem is that using those tools no matter how energy efficient will add to the total amount of energy humans use, because even if an AI generates an image faster than a human could, the human still needs 100W constantly.

      This doesn’t mean, that we shouldn’t make it more efficient but let’s be honest, more energy efficient AI just means that we would use even more AI everywhere.

      • RmDebArc_5@sh.itjust.works
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        27 days ago

        Solution: remove human

        That’s what a lot of news sites are doing, getting rid of large parts of the employees and having the remaining do the same work with LLM. If you burn the no longer needed employees as an alternative heating solution your energy usage drops effectively to zero

        • wischi@programming.dev
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          26 days ago

          True, but It’s still not what I meant unless they kill those humans. The employees that did that work before still need the 100W. It might be that they can now do something else (or just be unemployed) but the net energy usage is not going down.

      • derpgon@programming.dev
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        28 days ago

        But speaking of efficiency, a human can do more useful tasks while AI is crunching numbers. But that is very subjective.

        • wischi@programming.dev
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          23 days ago

          It depends what you mean by useful. Most humans are (at least at the moment) more versatile than even the most advanced AI we have. But you have to keep in mind that there are jobs with pretty mundane tasks where you don’t really need the intelligence and versatility of a human.

          • derpgon@programming.dev
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            26 days ago

            Thats what I meant, keep the tasks separated, and let both what they do better than the other half.