Closed seanmcilroy29 closed 3 years ago
Regarding 1:
An SDK seems like the best bang for buck to have developers improve their emissions (or at least keep track). What's interesting is what form should the SDK take? I am a fan of CodeCarbon for Python ML models, something as simple as importing the tool to your code seems like the most frictionless route.
Another form an SDK could take could be akin to an energy profiler, just as developers care about performance, it might be helpful to selectively target parts of the code that theoretically are using the most energy resources.
Indeed @Hevia , from an innovation standpoint anything that will help reduce friction to boost adoption will be tremendously useful. I shared a potential roadmap to that for Green AI tooling in this article and this video
Close and approved by WG
A SDK for developers on 3 platforms to measure the carbon impact of his application
An End 2 End prototype for video streaming solution (client and server)
Create a green blockchain with Hyperleger to validate carbon save for applications