this post was submitted on 07 Jun 2026
614 points (98.7% liked)
Technology
85243 readers
4168 users here now
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Our Rules
- Follow the lemmy.world rules.
- Only tech related news or articles.
- Be excellent to each other!
- Mod approved content bots can post up to 10 articles per day.
- Threads asking for personal tech support may be deleted.
- Politics threads may be removed.
- No memes allowed as posts, OK to post as comments.
- Only approved bots from the list below, this includes using AI responses and summaries. To ask if your bot can be added please contact a mod.
- Check for duplicates before posting, duplicates may be removed
- Accounts 7 days and younger will have their posts automatically removed.
Approved Bots
founded 3 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I remember my computer not being fast enough to even play an MP3 file. Two years later, my computer was capable of running 3D accelerated games, browsing the internet at broadband speeds and playing videos.
Sometimes technology advances fast. We could be entering such an era as there are major investments taking place and global competitors will rise to the occasion to market these to a broader audience.
I think it will be entirely possible for consumers to use a decent LLM on their computer in a few years time.
It’s not the 90s anymore. Unless there’s a compression algorithm putting billions of relationships into a manageable size, local AI is highly specific under 8G vram (text-to-speech as an example is under 1G) let alone the context required for keeping a conversation or writing code.
If text-to-speech is what Youtube uses to autogenerate the subtitles, it is worthless for anything that uses slightly richer vocabulary.
No. Autogenerated subtitles would be speech-to-text, rather than text-to-speech.
To be clear, I wasn't talking about a leap in LLM design. I was talking about a leap in hardware capabilities...
Improved hardware capabilities used to come very quickly (see Moore's Law and Dennard Scaling). However that trend is basically over, so getting higher performance hardware takes a lot of effort to make hardware specialized for certain tasks. That's why you see there inference accelerators like Groq, SambaNova, Cerebrus, etc. However this is hardware that still is gonna go into data centers. Something innovative has to happen on the AI side for commercial-grade models to be runnable on consumer hardware.
Which are increasingly out of reach for a normal person. Phones let alone PC hardware have increased exponentially in recent history