Laptops/desktops are cheaper per flop than any datacenter hardware by a good order of magnitude.
The problem is that expectations rise in datacenters, hardware/power/security/availability guarantees cost real money. Then the operator providing these guarantees expects some margin.
You can see this most clearly with "developer desktops", a gcp instance costs about 10x a hetzner instance which costs between 5 and 10x the same hardware sitting in the back of an office somewhere. While all of these premiums matter for 24/7 systems under active development, they don't really matter for ephemeral small scale workloads.
Paying 2k for something that you use 100 hours of is quite expensive. Having the capability built into your existing silicon which you would buy for 1k is cheap. Paying 200 dollars a month for 2 years give a present value of $4200 dollars. Meaning that that paying 2k upfront cuts your overall spend in half.
I spent 6k on codex last month which, if repeated, implies a present value of ~144k.
The problem is that expectations rise in datacenters, hardware/power/security/availability guarantees cost real money. Then the operator providing these guarantees expects some margin.
You can see this most clearly with "developer desktops", a gcp instance costs about 10x a hetzner instance which costs between 5 and 10x the same hardware sitting in the back of an office somewhere. While all of these premiums matter for 24/7 systems under active development, they don't really matter for ephemeral small scale workloads.