>My use case would primarily be in search, integration, and indexing other software projects with my own, as well as transcription/indexing of interesting video and audio content (eg Dwarkesh interviews) that I don’t have time to watch but want to easily search and apply to my projects, and search/indexing for useful information from things like Linux kernel and security mailing lists. Basically there is a lot of stuff that, if the cost were low enough, I would point a reasonably intelligent AI at to distill out useful information and apply it to my projects, or just cherry pick the interesting things out and surface them to me so I don’t have to wade through all the mundane stuff and man-made slop getting in the way.

All of that feels like something that a $20 chatgpt pro subscription is for, maybe with slightly better tool use capabilities. There's no way that a $4000 purchase on a GPU would ever be worth it if all you're doing is running a handful of queries per day.

It would require much more than a couple of queries per day, I want to basically do bulk ingestion and search/evaluation/integration across tens of thousands of videos and software projects (if it were cheap enough and smart enough). It would basically be setting up and operating a pretty large data ingestion and coding agent pipeline, which I would want to itself be mostly automated.

It’s ok if you don’t want to do the same kind of thing but I find it weird how dismissive so many people get about wanting to use LLMs for large projects, or how anybody who says they’re using them for these kinds of things (I’m doing similar for other stuff) gets challenged on what they’re doing it for.