That' what the buzz focused on, strange as we don't actually know what it cost them. While inference optimization is a fact and is even more impactful since training costs benefit from economics of scale.
That' what the buzz focused on, strange as we don't actually know what it cost them. While inference optimization is a fact and is even more impactful since training costs benefit from economics of scale.
I don't think that's strange at all, it's a much more palatable narrative for the mass who doesn't know what inference and training is and who think having conversations=training
I agree nothing surprising in that, also back then inference wasn't as much questioned as today with regards to being sold at a loss.