• @[email protected]
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    637 months ago

    Górny took issue with everything from the energy consumption driven by AI

    This has to be a joke. The team behind a distro that compiles everything from scratch all the time is concerned about wasting power now? The only distro for which I ever setup a compile cluster?

    Give me a break. This is the new luddite movement.

    • lemmyreader
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      697 months ago

      Gotta say your comment makes an insightful impression, however Gentoo compilations are peanuts compared to the massive energy sucking hype that A.I. is. I am glad that people speak out publicly against this insane madness. A.I. hyping during climate crisis ? Overwhelming sales of SUVs Plans to move to planet Mars Who would have guessed that years ago ?

      • @ricdeh
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        97 months ago

        Well it’s the training of LLMs that consumes so much energy, simply using them (for say software development purposes) (inference) probably takes less power than recompiling your Gentoo.

        • suoko
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          17 months ago

          Nobody can argue that ChromeOS (gentoo) Is the fastest and lightest and more polished distro available, though

      • @[email protected]
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        -97 months ago

        Gentoo compilations are peanuts compared to the massive energy sucking hype that A.I. is.

        Their overall impact is low because they’re niche. It wouldn’t be if Gentoo were more popular. Imagine all of the AWS EC2 instances running Gentoo. And all of the Docker container builds still compiling glibc over and over.

        Fact is they still built a horrifically inefficient system for deploying software. It’s a crazy hypocritical stance to take. AI at least provides benefit - something that can’t be said of Gentoo’s waste.

    • @[email protected]
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      467 months ago

      You really went looking for something to hate on there didn’t you. That is the only sentence in the whole article that even mentions power consumption, all the other arguments both fit and against are for a variety of other topics.

      It seems to be that you are more likely caught up in some kind of movement if one argument from one person is enough for you to label everyone there luddites

      • @[email protected]
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        -307 months ago

        You really went looking for something to hate on there didn’t you. That is the only sentence in the whole article that even mentions power consumption, all the other arguments both fit and against are for a variety of other topics.

        The rest of the ridiculous moralizing was pretty bad as well. This was just the most egregiously stupid thing listed in the article.

        • @[email protected]
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          167 months ago

          I thought your comment was more ridiculous

          1 person making a query has thousands of hours of computing behind it

          1 person compiling software themselves does not

          • @[email protected]
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            -57 months ago

            I’m not saying AI is not energy intensive. I’m saying the team who developed the least efficient Linux distribution throwing shade about AI being “energy inefficient” are hypocrites.

            • @[email protected]
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              117 months ago

              But again it wasn’t the team, and it wasn’t " throwing shade" it was one guy, who listed it as one reason against AI. Power consumption is also a valid reason against using gentoo. People are able, and indeed should be aware of potential problems and downside of things, even if they are involved in other things which also has those issues. I am sure most of the gentoo team would readily acknowledge that energy consumption is a downside of gentoo compared to other distros.

    • macniel
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      217 months ago

      If being a luddite means keeping man in the loop so be it.

      • @[email protected]
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        557 months ago

        The original Luddite movement was literally a worker’s rights movement, and the “irrationally afraid of technology” characterization was manufactured by the ruling class, so yes. The Luddites were right then and they’re right now too.

        • @MotoAsh
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          7 months ago

          The only problem the Luddites had is they went and busted the machines instead of the rich owners’ kneecaps.

          If you say, “they did that too!” Well, NOT ENOUGH!!

        • static-dragon
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          47 months ago

          There was an episode of Cool People Who Did Cool Stuff that covered the luddites, I had no idea beforehand what they actually stood for, fascinating stuff

        • capital
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          -37 months ago

          As someone who regularly saves time by automating, I can’t get on board for a movement which directly opposes process improvement by improving efficiency.

          • @[email protected]
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            117 months ago

            They’re not, they’re opposing a process that leads to garbage output and horrible systemic efficiency.

            • capital
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              07 months ago

              Luddites objected primarily to the rising popularity of automated textile equipment, threatening the jobs and livelihoods of skilled workers as this technology allowed them to be replaced by cheaper and less skilled workers.

              https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luddite

              I’ve also read a book on the subject of Luddites and it was clear to me that it was a response to higher efficiency machinery replacing the need for a good portion of their jobs.

              • @[email protected]
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                7 months ago

                This led to mass starvation as the workers no longer could feed themselves and no industry replaced the lost work. The textiles produced were of lower quality too, and sold for less which harmed the local economy leading to a rise in food prices along with the lower wages. Since the vast majority of arable land was used for cotton too no local food could lower the prices. Many people died as the luddites predicted.

                There was mass starvation

                They were right. This is not “anti-automation” this is against lower wages, mass unemployment, and an economic decrease. The automation was the cause of this, yes, but the concept of automation was not the issue. The issue was it’s use here.

                If the workers were provided an alternative job, if there was some plan to avoid starvation, and if the textiles were of a reasonable quality then there would be no issue.

                History proved the luddites correct

              • @[email protected]
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                37 months ago

                The Luddites lost, but you should read the rest of this wiki article to learn how that happened, and consider again which side you’re on.

        • @[email protected]
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          -87 months ago

          But the lump of labour fallacy is wrong - in the end automation makes us all wealthier as goods become cheaper, and people can do more productive work (and be better educated for it too).

          • @[email protected]
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            177 months ago

            This is how it should be, but it isn’t the present day reality. Productivity goes up, wages go down, and the rich get richer. We’re headed straight for technofeudalism buddy…

    • @steeznson
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      127 months ago

      To a certain extent other distros rely on more obscure distros like gentoo which uses package compilation as the default. If upstream are not publishing code which can be reproducibly built then the gentoo maintainers are the first to know and can raise an issue.

        • @steeznson
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          77 months ago

          Tell me you don’t know how FOSS works without telling me you don’t know how FOSS works…

          • @[email protected]
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            -27 months ago

            wut? Your reply had absolutely nothing to do with any point or argument I was making. Near as I can tell you think I’m assaulting Gentoo or something? Missed my point by a wide margin though.

    • @[email protected]
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      7 months ago

      Also I think nobody so far weighed the energy consumption of e.g. using copilot against the environmental footprint of a human doing the legwork manually

      • @[email protected]
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        17 months ago

        Ah, thanks for that link! I actually read the first few pages on the latest MIT Tech Review some days ago, thought I’d ready the rest and forgot, now I can.

    • @[email protected]
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      -257 months ago

      This is the new luddite movement.

      It really is. Degrowth is destitution and death - just look at Germany.

      We need to decouple electricity production from environmental damage - build renewable power and nuclear power station en masse and invest heavily in nuclear fusion.

      • @[email protected]
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        107 months ago

        Degrowth is a hilarious word to use here because degrowth is literally necessary for us to not run the natural resources of our planet dry. Infinite growth in a finite planet is just logically impossible.

      • @ricdeh
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        87 months ago

        The first part is at best controversial. The middle part is actually reasonable. And the last part is just ridiculously random and out-of-touch.