News

The disbanding of Tesla’s Dojo efforts follows the departure of around 20 workers, who left the automaker to start their own ...
Tesla is shutting down Dojo, the supercomputer project that was at one time key to the automaker's driverless-vehicle ...
Dojo is powered by Tesla’s D1 chip, designed in-house (and manufactured by TSMC) to handle massive volumes of driving data ...
Once it became clear that all paths converged to AI6, I had to shut down Dojo and make some tough personnel choices, as Dojo ...
A spokesperson for Empire State Development told 2 On Your Side, "New York State has not invested in the Dojo super computer project at the Buffalo Gigafactory. As of Feb. 1, Tesla reported investing ...
Tesla has ended its in-house supercomputer project known as Dojo. The system was used for AI training to improve Autopilot functions and Full Self-Driving ...
Tesla is shutting down its Dojo supercomputer program, reassigning staff and leaning more on AMD and Nvidia. Tesla's eventual designs expected to rely on a unified architecture spanning from edge ...
Tesla shuts down its Dojo AI supercomputer, ending in-house chip efforts as Elon Musk shifts focus to AI5/AI6 chips and ...
Tesla’s Dojo supercomputer — once presented as a cornerstone of the company’s AI ambitions — has been abruptly scrapped.
Tesla abandons in-house chip production in favour of Nvidia, AMD, and Samsung partnerships to power its self-driving ...