- Tesla’s Dojo supercomputer aims to revolutionize autonomous driving.
- Custom chips power AI ambitions.
- Timeline remains uncertain.
Tesla’s Dojo supercomputer is more than just a fancy piece of hardware—it’s the cornerstone of Elon Musk’s vision to transform Tesla into an AI-driven powerhouse.
Designed to train the neural networks behind Tesla’s Full Self-Driving (FSD) system, Dojo aims to process vast amounts of visual data from Tesla vehicles, ultimately enabling true autonomous driving.
Custom chips for a custom future
At the heart of Dojo lies Tesla’s proprietary D1 chip, a palm-sized silicon marvel boasting 50 billion transistors.
By fusing 25 D1 chips into a single tile, Tesla creates a unified computer system with impressive compute power.
The company’s goal? To decrease reliance on expensive Nvidia GPUs and potentially offer AI training capabilities to other businesses down the line.
Betting big on silicon dreams
Despite Musk’s enthusiasm, Dojo remains a work in progress. Tesla aims for Dojo to be among the top five most powerful supercomputers by early 2024, but the timeline seems uncertain.
The company continues to invest heavily, pledging $500 million for a Dojo facility in Buffalo and reserving space at its Austin gigafactory for a “super dense, water-cooled supercomputer cluster.”