Trillions of dollars are being spent on building datacenters for inference. Amazon software engineers are inventing bullshit work for AI to inflate their internal usage scores.
I’m no expert, but isn’t there a fatal flaw here? Most of the work LLM inference is used for is essentially busywork that wouldn’t exist in an automated economy. It’s writing emails, it’s code reviews, it’s asking dumb questions, it’s transcribing or summarizing research or zoom meetings. Even in software engineering, a lot of LLM tokens are used in the kind of inference that a hypercompetent solo-coding model with limited or no human oversight just wouldn’t need.
Think of an office with 10 human employees working in, say, payroll, constantly sending each other emails, messages, having meetings, calling and speaking to each other and other people, summarizing documents, liaising with other departments, asking AI question about how to use various accounting tools, or about the company’s employee benefits package. Now say this department is automated. An AI model acts as an agent to use an already-existing software package to do all the payroll work. No emails, calls or meetings - or at least far fewer. The total inference work required goes down. And the existing software package doesn’t use AI (even if it may have been coded with it), because you don’t need AI to compute payroll data once you have sufficiently complex and customized software for your business.
In the same way, if we imagine our automated future, super high intensity / high token usage inference is actually not really universally required in a lot of occupations. It will be for some multimodal work (plumbing, surgery, domestic cleaning in complex physical environments), but for many tasks, one-and-done software coded either by AI or that already exists can just be deployed at low intensity by an agent. The AI that replaces your job might at first do a lot of coding, but as time goes on, the amount of novel inference required will diminish. Eventually, software coded in a one-and-done way by the AI may actually handle almost all the workload, and token usage for generation may be very limited to just some high level agent occasionally relaying instructions or performing oversight.
In this scenario, why would we expect inference workloads to shoot up so dramatically? Much enterprise AI usage is currently “fake” in the sense that it would not be performed in a fully automated environment. It’s a between-times thing.
Trillions of dollars are being spent on building datacenters for inference. Amazon software engineers are inventing bullshit work for AI to inflate their internal usage scores.
I’m no expert, but isn’t there a fatal flaw here? Most of the work LLM inference is used for is essentially busywork that wouldn’t exist in an automated economy. It’s writing emails, it’s code reviews, it’s asking dumb questions, it’s transcribing or summarizing research or zoom meetings. Even in software engineering, a lot of LLM tokens are used in the kind of inference that a hypercompetent solo-coding model with limited or no human oversight just wouldn’t need.
Think of an office with 10 human employees working in, say, payroll, constantly sending each other emails, messages, having meetings, calling and speaking to each other and other people, summarizing documents, liaising with other departments, asking AI question about how to use various accounting tools, or about the company’s employee benefits package. Now say this department is automated. An AI model acts as an agent to use an already-existing software package to do all the payroll work. No emails, calls or meetings - or at least far fewer. The total inference work required goes down. And the existing software package doesn’t use AI (even if it may have been coded with it), because you don’t need AI to compute payroll data once you have sufficiently complex and customized software for your business.
In the same way, if we imagine our automated future, super high intensity / high token usage inference is actually not really universally required in a lot of occupations. It will be for some multimodal work (plumbing, surgery, domestic cleaning in complex physical environments), but for many tasks, one-and-done software coded either by AI or that already exists can just be deployed at low intensity by an agent. The AI that replaces your job might at first do a lot of coding, but as time goes on, the amount of novel inference required will diminish. Eventually, software coded in a one-and-done way by the AI may actually handle almost all the workload, and token usage for generation may be very limited to just some high level agent occasionally relaying instructions or performing oversight.
In this scenario, why would we expect inference workloads to shoot up so dramatically? Much enterprise AI usage is currently “fake” in the sense that it would not be performed in a fully automated environment. It’s a between-times thing.
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