top | item 32590989

(no title)

cosarara | 3 years ago

I don't agree with the reasoning presented. It takes the estimate for the amount of energy that it takes to run the internet infrastructure and clients (141GW * 8765h in a year = 1235865 GWh), divides it by the amount of data transferred yearly (241 billion GB) and gets to 5.12kWh/GB.

You might argue that if people download more data, more equipment needs to run to enable it, but really all this energy consumption is happening regardless of my PC being idle or saturating its fiber pipes with torrents. If your website weights 14kb, all this same equipment needs to be on for my PC to load it.

discuss

order

worldofmatthew|3 years ago

The website usage on the client side is more to do with resource usage. Unnecessary usage of Javascript is often what makes websites laggy.

You computer will normally down-clock (you can turn this off in the bios) when under lighter loads.The difference between a JS-free webpage and a bloated web page that uses multiple JavaScript with extra Javascript for ads and tracking could be around 10W/H to 40W/H on Desktops.

cosarara|3 years ago

I agree with this. I was disagreeing with the statement

> Bandwidth is extremely carbon intensive.

and the reasoning that supports that statement.