Elon Musk doesn’t want Tesla to be just an automaker. He wants Tesla to be an AI company, one that’s figured out how to make cars drive themselves. Crucial to that mission was Dojo, a custom-built ...
For years, Elon Musk has spoken of the promise of Dojo, the AI supercomputer that was supposed to be the cornerstone of Tesla’s AI ambitions. It was important enough to Musk that in July 2024, he said ...
Tesla’s Dojo supercomputer dream ends after leadership changes and mass departures reshape its AI strategy The Dojo project looked to revolutionize autonomous driving before internal shifts halted its ...
To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. Preview this article 1 min Tesla's original plan was to ...
Tesla is reportedly dissolving its Dojo supercomputer team, abandoning in-house chip development for autonomous driving. This shift coincides with Elon Musk's focus on AI goals and a $29 billion ...
As first reported by Bloomberg, Tesla is disbanding the team behind Dojo, its in-house AI-training supercomputer, and reassigning remaining staff to other projects within the company. This marks a ...
Dojo head Peter Bannon has also reportedly left Tesla as the company shifts away from training chips on in-house tech. Dojo head Peter Bannon has also reportedly left Tesla as the company shifts away ...
What just happened? Tesla has scrapped its ambitious Dojo supercomputer project, which was designed to train the company's full self-driving neural networks. The decision marks a surprising change of ...
Tesla has pulled the plug on the Dojo supercomputer that was designed to make its Full Self-Driving software better. The data center used multiple custom-built chips known as D1 to train artificial ...
Tesla has reportedly shut down its Dojo supercomputer project after several high-profile departures, including project head Peter Bannon. Bloomberg reported the move, citing people familiar with the ...