On a “respond to an individual query” level, yeah it’s not that much. But prior to response the data center had to be constructed, the entire web had to be scraped, the models trained, the servers continually ran regardless of load. There’s also way too many “hidden” queries across the web in general from companies trying to summarize every email or product.
All of that adds to the energy costs. This equivocation is meant to make people feel less bad about the energy impact of using AI, when so much of the cost is in building AI.
Furthermore, that’s the median value–the one that falls right in the middle of the quantity of queries. There’s a limit to how much less energy a query to the left of the median can use; there’s a significantly higher runway to the right of the median for excess energy use. This also only accounted for text queries; images and video generation efforts are gonna use a lot more.
victorz@lemmy.world 22 hours ago
You should probably not eat things because of how much calories they have or don’t have, but because of how much of their nutrients you need, and how much they lack other, dangerous shit. Also eat slowly until you’re full and no more. Also move a lot.
We shouldn’t need calculators for this healthy lifestyle.
The problem with needing to know which foods are healthy is because… well, we forgot.
ArbitraryValue@sh.itjust.works 21 hours ago
I’m not saying that ice cream is healthier than a normal dinner, just that if I really crave it sometimes then the cost to my health of eating it periodically is actually quite low, whereas the cost of certain other desserts (like soft drinks) is relatively high. I’d much rather eat the pint of ice cream than drink six cans of coke, but the calories are approximately equivalent and the ice cream is probably healthier in other ways.
victorz@lemmy.world 21 hours ago
Yeah that’s a good point, too. 😊