Of course... it's definitely interesting. I'm also thinking that there are times where you insource vs outsource to a SaaS that's going to do the job for you and you have one less thing to really worry about. Comparing cost to begin with was just a point I was curious about, so I ran the numbers. I can totally see a point where you have that power in a local developer workstation (power requirements notwithstanding), good luck getting that much power to an outlet in your home office. Let alone other issues.
Right now, I think we've probably got 3-5 years of manufacturing woes to work through and another 3-5 years beyond that to get power infrastructure where it needs to be to support it... and even then, I don't think all the resources we can reasonably throw at a combination of mostly nuclear and solar will get there as quickly as it's needed.
That also doesn't consider the bubble itself, or the level of poor to mediocre results altogether even at the frontier level. I mean for certain tasks, it's very close to human efforts in a really diminished timeframe, for others it isn't... and even then, people/review/qa/qc will become the bottleneck for most things in practice.
I've managed to get weeks of work done in a day with AI, but then still have to follow-up for a couple days of iteration on following features... still valuable, but it's mixed. I'm more bullish today than even a few months ago all the same.