I work at a Fortune 50 company with hundreds of analysts, engineers, data scientists, and from socializing and networking with people, it’s become really clear to me that a lot of people are using their own PC or paying for AI out of pocket. This was shocking to me, as I thought that the company was funding AI like API GPT for work. But it seems like a lot of people are actually using their own personal computers at home and paying for API access to Claude, GPT4, or even getting local AI models like Llama 3.1. When I was talking to a data scientist specifically, He explains that he spent $2900 out of his own paycheck to get a top of the line computer with a really good processor and RTX 4080 Just so he can run his own local AI model for work in order to solve business problems… Like, I was shocked, they’re not bringing company data onto their own devices or anything, but they are using local AI models to generate code in python, SQL, C#, stuff like that…

Here’s an example of a redditor who appears to be doing the same thing. He talks about how the company is investing strategically long run, but won’t pay for AI resources, so he just pays for it out of pocket. This is actually very common and very similar to what I’ve heard at work!!

Does anyone else have any experience or has heard of This being done? I’ve never heard of this before, but apparently it’s more common than I thought. Pretty crazy to pay out of pocket for this kind of stuff

  • jubilationtcornpone@sh.itjust.works
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    3 months ago

    I wouldn’t pay for an AI subscription but I have no problem using my own PC for work on the condition that they give me a VM to remote into. Mainly because I like using my three big monitors and the shitty laptops my previous employers provided are either underpowered or locked down to the point where multi-monitor support is really poor.

    I do pay for tools that I use outside of work and if it’s something that helps me with my day job, I have no problem using it for that. That said, using AI to generate code is usually a waste of time. Unless it’s something really, really basic.

    • m-p{3}@lemmy.ca
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      3 months ago

      I guess I’m lucky, my work laptop works well for multi-monitor support through the docking station and I got myself a triple-display, dual system KVM (3x DP1.4a) and it works as expected, switching between my work laptop and my gaming desktop.