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Because old laptop that can’t run a local LLM in reasonable time.


0.6b - 1.5b models are surprisingly good for RAG, and should work reasonably well even on old toasters. Then there's gemma 3n which runs fine-ish even on mobile phones.


Most people who can nag about old laptops on HN can just afford newer one but are cheap as Scrooge Mcduck.


FYI: non-Western countries exist.


Eh, even just “countries that are not the US” would be a correct statement. US tech salaries are just in an entire different ballpark to what most companies outside the US can offer. I’m in Canada, I make good money (as far as Canadian salaries go), but nowhere near “buy an expensive laptop whenever” money.


It's not uncommon for professionals to spend many thousands of dollars on the tools and equipment they need for their trade.

Try telling a plumber that $2,000 for a laptop is a financial burden for a software engineer.


Comparing my problems to other people’s problems don’t make mine go away. A single purchase hitting a unit of percentage or more of anyone’s income is a large purchase regardless of what they’re making. Professionals being expected to shell out their own money to make their boss money is another problem entirely. A decent laptop is a big expense for me, their tools are an even bigger one for them, and none of these statements are contradictory.


It may also come down to laptops being produced and sold mostly by US companies, which means that the general fact of most items (e.g. produce) being much more expensive in the US compared to, say, Europe doesn't really apply.


Sure, maybe. In the end, what makes an expense big or not is which proportion of their income goes towards it. Most of the rest of the world has (much) lower salaries, and as you pointed out, often higher cost for equipment. Therefore, the purchase is/feels larger.


People who are from those countries that can nag on HN and know whant HN is are most likely still better off than most of their fellow countrymen.


It feels like you're suggesting that someone being better off than most in their country necessarily means buying a new laptop is not a large purchase for them. I'd flip it like this: is a single item hitting multiple units of percentage of one’s income ever a small purchase?


Do you have any evidence to back that up? The barrier for entry to HN is an email account, it isn't necessarily this tech industry exclusive zone you're imagining.


I mean, sure, but this was mentioned in the article, I didn’t make it up:

“Offline Wikipedia will work better on my ancient, low-power laptop.”




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