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Discussion (12 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews
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I feel that would be handy in all sorts of situations when networks are down.
For most actual emergency scenarios, a device that focuses on storage of large amounts of prepared normal reference material [0] will be wayyyyy cheaper, more durable, portable, and able to run on batteries or being constantly plugged into a somehow-still-normal electrical grid. (Think an e-ink tablet that can run off a 5V battery pack buffering a literal handcrank.)
In contrast, imagine spending the money to build a beefy LLM-running computer with good GPU/RAM, and somehow mothballing it (to depreciate, unused) in a "safe" location for the big earthquake/flood/etc... Then when the disaster strikes and you dig it out, how will you power it when you need it, and for long enough to do anything useful?
Even if wall-current civilization is 20 miles away on the other side of the mountain, are you going to carry it on your back, or are you going to carry food and water to live? If you do drag it there, are they going to let you run it when it cuts into light for surgery or heat to sterilize drinking water?
Knowing humans? They'd probably take it by force and run it for themselves instead of providing light and heat to surgeons and water sterilizers...
/daily dose of cynism
But, the current model you really want for an emergency kit is Gemma 4 12B QAT 4-bit. At ~7GB on disk, it's small enough to run on a tablet or any modern computer, slowly if you don't have a GPU or modern Apple silicon, but exceedingly smart for its size, excellent vision capabilities, good tool user, surprisingly good reasoning.