News

“Once it became clear that all paths converged to AI6, I had to shut down Dojo and make some tough personnel choices, as Dojo ...
Tesla’s Dojo supercomputer is pushing the boundaries of artificial intelligence. Built in-house to power the next generation of self-driving technology, Dojo is a revolutionary AI training platform ...
Dojo is powered by Tesla’s D1 chip, designed in-house (and manufactured by TSMC) to handle massive volumes of driving data ...
SAN FRANCISCO] Tesla is disbanding its Dojo supercomputer team and its leader will depart the company, according to sources familiar with the matter, upending the automaker’s effort to develop ...
Tesla is giving up on building an in-house supercomputer for computer vision processing as part of its advanced driver assistance system.
Tesla is shifting its AI chip development exclusively toward inference chips that run real-time AI models in vehicles and robotics.
Tesla has officially halted operations of its Dojo supercomputer, a key element in CEO Elon Musk's vision for advancing full self-driving technolo ...
Tesla is dissolving its Dojo supercomputer team, as it looks to use Nvidia, AMD, and Samsung chips. The company's Dojo head, ...
Ganesh Venkataramanan, previously with Tesla's Dojo, has launched DensityAI. The startup aims to transform self-driving car AI development. DensityAI ...
Tesla shutters its Dojo supercomputer team after leadership departures and a broader restructuring of AI priorities.
The company first detailed Dojo in 2021, and installed the initial system in 2022. That version of Dojo has around 3,000 D1 chips, providing a total of 1.1 exaflops (BF16/CFP8) of performance.
Tesla abandons in-house chip production in favour of Nvidia, AMD, and Samsung partnerships to power its self-driving ...