Tag: Model

  • Tesla shuts down Dojo, the AI training supercomputer that Musk said would be key to full self-driving

    Tesla is breaking up the team behind its Dojo supercomputer, ending the automaker’s play at developing in-house chips for driverless technology, according to Bloomberg.

    Dojo’s lead, Peter Bannon, is leaving the company, and the remaining team members will be reassigned to other data center and compute projects within Tesla, per Bloomberg’s reporting, which cited anonymous sources. 

    The disbanding of Tesla’s Dojo efforts follows the departure of around 20 workers, who left the automaker to start their own AI company called DensityAI. The new startup is reportedly coming out of stealth soon and is building chips, hardware, and software that will power data centers for AI that are used in robotics, by AI agents, and in automotive applications. DensityAI was founded by former Dojo head Ganesh Venkataramanan and ex-Tesla employees Bill Chang and Ben Floering.

    It also comes at a crucial time for Tesla.

    CEO Elon Musk has pushed to get shareholders to view Tesla as an AI and robotics company, despite a limited robotaxi launch in Austin this past June that featured Model Y vehicles with a human in the front passenger seat and resulted in a number of reported incidents of the vehicles exhibiting problematic driving behavior.

    Tesla’s decision to shut down Dojo, which Musk has been talking about since 2019, is a major shift in strategy. Musk has said that Dojo would be the cornerstone of Tesla’s AI ambitions and its goal to reach full self-driving due to its ability to “process truly vast amounts of video data.” He talked about Dojo, albeit briefly, as recently as the company’s second-quarter earnings call.

    In 2023, Morgan Stanley predicted Dojo could add $500 billion to the company’s market value by unlocking new revenue streams in the form of robotaxis and software services. Just last year, Musk noted that Tesla’s AI team would “double down” on Dojo in the lead-up to Tesla’s robotaxi reveal, which happened in October. 

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    But talk about Dojo halted around August 2024, when Musk began touting Cortex instead, Tesla’s “giant new AI training supercluster being built at Tesla HQ in Austin to solve real-world AI.”

    The Dojo project was one part supercomputer, one part in-house chip-making. Tesla unveiled its D1 chip when it formally announced Dojo at its first AI Day in 2021. Venkataramanan presented the chip, which Tesla said would be used alongside Nvidia’s GPU to power the Dojo supercomputer. The automaker also said it was working on a next-gen D2 chip that would solve any information flow bottlenecks of its predecessor. 

    Sources told Bloomberg that now Tesla plans to increase its reliance on Nvidia, as well as other external tech partners like AMD for compute and Samsung for chip manufacturing. Tesla last month signed a $16.5 billion deal with Samsung to make its AI6 inference chips, a chip design that promises to scale from powering FSD and Tesla’s Optimus humanoid robots all the way to high-performance AI training in data centers. 

    During Tesla’s second-quarter earnings call, Musk hinted at potential redundancies. 

    “Thinking about Dojo 3 and the AI6 inference chip, it seems like intuitively, we want to try to find convergence there, where it’s basically the same chip,” Musk said. 

    The news comes as Tesla’s board offers Musk a $29 billion pay package to keep him at Tesla and help push the company’s AI efforts forward, rather than getting too sidetracked by his other companies, including the more pure-play AI startup xAI. 

    TechCrunch has reached out to Tesla for more information.

    Have a sensitive tip or confidential documents? We’re reporting on the inner workings of the AI industry — from the companies shaping its future to the people impacted by their decisions. Reach out to Rebecca Bellan at rebecca.bellan@techcrunch.com and Maxwell Zeff at maxwell.zeff@techcrunch.com. For secure communication, you can contact us via Signal at @rebeccabellan.491 and @mzeff.88.

  • Managing your team through a small screen

    Managing your team through a small screen

    More companies are switching to remote workflows due to COVID-19 and the added benefits it offers. But how can you manage a team through a small screen?

    Modern problems require modern solutions. When the COVID-19 pandemic first hit, many companies (even tech ones) scrambled to set up a remote workflow so they could continue to work even whilst staff were unable to leave their homes.
    There was a rush to set up platforms like Zoom to ensure that the entire team could communicate effectively and work from home. Many believed it to be a temporary change and that we’d be back in the office in a couple of weeks.
    But that didn’t happen
    Instead, most of us are still stuck working from home. While it initially seemed like a problem, more and more teams are starting to take notice of the benefits of remote workflows. Whether it’s the cost savings from no commuting or allowing your employees to be more comfortable in their work environment, there are a surprising number of benefits that we can expect from working remotely.
    My company, Capital Business Media, has been operating on a hybrid remote working model since 2011. Staff only went into the office two or three days per week, and that was before COVID-19 even happened. Nowadays, we’ve switched to almost exclusively using a remote workflow and only going into the office when we absolutely need to have a face-to-face meeting. As a team that adopted this style of workflow early on, we’ve faced a lot of trial and error which was necessary to perfect our remote workflow. So hopefully here I can pass on some of the most important lessons we’ve learned and how you can also manage your team through just a small screen.

    Keeping track of everything that happens

    Since you’re working remotely, you won’t be able to see your staff or what they’re doing. As such, it’s vital that you keep track of everything when it comes to their work responsibilities and duties. For instance, I don’t keep track of their working hours as I am far more focused on the output, but if you bill your clients by the hour then make sure that you have the ability to do so. You should be asking your team for updates on what they’re doing, and you should have your own spreadsheets and dashboards that will help you lead your staff.
    Keeping track of my staff helps me understand where they’re at, what tasks they’re on and what they should be doing next. Since you’re working remotely, information and communication become two of the most important factors that you absolutely need to keep an eye on.

    Adopt a proactive approach to communicating with staff

    Unlike working in an office, you don’t have to immediately respond when you work remotely. After all, your recipient could be in the toilet, walking the dog, stretching their legs or even making a drink. If you have an urgent message to tell them, you can’t just speak to them and catch their attention.
    When you’re managing your team through a small screen, you have to remember that they can only interact with you through a screen too. This makes immediate conversations difficult to sustain and grabbing their attention becomes tough. As a result, you’ll need to switch to a more proactive approach to communicating with your staff. This involves:

    Planning ahead with your team so everyone knows what they’re doing for the rest of the week as opposed to just a single day.
    Responding to emails and messages even if you don’t have a full response. Just letting someone know you’ve received the message will help ensure there’s no assumptions or miscommunication.
    Establish a shared message board or chat program where people can leave messages and communicate with each other even if they’re not online at the same time. The goal is to keep things orderly and to ensure everyone knows what they’re doing.
    Communicate as much info as you can in a single message as long as it’s relevant to the conversation or your work. Don’t break up your responses or information into multiple parts. This will ensure that everyone reads the entire message instead of waiting for your response and potentially missing something.

    Platforms like Zoom allow you to easily adopt a proactive approach to communicating with staff. Instead of just relying on emails, you’ll need to integrate instant messaging, group calls and video calls to ensure that everyone is one the same page. You also need to embrace the fact that your team might miss messages now and then, so packing as much information as you can into a single message will ensure that it is read in its entirety.
    It’s difficult to adapt to the idea of managing your team through a screen. The most important concept to learn is that information becomes incredibly important. Understanding the status of your staff members and what they’re doing will be the key to unlocking your team’s remote potential and managing them with the least amount of stress.