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Tesla Shuts Down Dojo Project

Tesla Shuts Down Dojo Project

See - Sada Elbalad19 hours ago
Rana Atef
In an unexpected move, Tesla officially shut down its Dojo project, which is a supercomputer once touted as the key to unlocking unprecedented self-driving capabilities for its cars.
The ambitious project, which cost $500 million, was meant to catapult Tesla to the front of the AI race.
Elon Musk confirmed the reports that Tesla disbanded the team working on its Dojo AI training supercomputer, just a few weeks after announcing he expected to have Tesla's second cluster operating 'at scale' in 2026.
'Once it became clear that all paths converged to AI6, I had to shut down Dojo and make some tough personnel choices, as Dojo 2 was now an evolutionary dead end,' Musk posted on X.
After creating its first Dojo and powering it with a mix of Nvidia GPUs and D1 chips, Tesla planned to establish a second Dojo factory that a second-generation D2 chip would have powered.
It appears the D2 chip under development has been delayed along with the broader Dojo project as Tesla shifts its focus to its AI5 and AI6 chips, which TSMC and Samsung, respectively are manufacturing.
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Tesla Shuts Down Dojo Project
Tesla Shuts Down Dojo Project

See - Sada Elbalad

time19 hours ago

  • See - Sada Elbalad

Tesla Shuts Down Dojo Project

Rana Atef In an unexpected move, Tesla officially shut down its Dojo project, which is a supercomputer once touted as the key to unlocking unprecedented self-driving capabilities for its cars. The ambitious project, which cost $500 million, was meant to catapult Tesla to the front of the AI race. Elon Musk confirmed the reports that Tesla disbanded the team working on its Dojo AI training supercomputer, just a few weeks after announcing he expected to have Tesla's second cluster operating 'at scale' in 2026. 'Once it became clear that all paths converged to AI6, I had to shut down Dojo and make some tough personnel choices, as Dojo 2 was now an evolutionary dead end,' Musk posted on X. After creating its first Dojo and powering it with a mix of Nvidia GPUs and D1 chips, Tesla planned to establish a second Dojo factory that a second-generation D2 chip would have powered. It appears the D2 chip under development has been delayed along with the broader Dojo project as Tesla shifts its focus to its AI5 and AI6 chips, which TSMC and Samsung, respectively are manufacturing. read more UAE's Lunar Mission Delayed to Tomorrow Twitter Lifts Trump's Account Ban Scientists Find Evidence Of 10،000 Black Holes Surrounding The Center Of The Milky Way Galaxy Greenhouse In Antarctica Able To Grow Vegetables Without Soil Or Sunlight Moving Over China: U.S. Is Again Home to World's Speediest Supercomputer Technology The 10 most expensive cars in the world Technology Top 10 fastest cars in the world Technology Lasers Could Make Computers 1 Million Times Faster Technology Smart technology taking control of our lives Videos & Features Story behind Trending Jessica Radcliffe Death Video News Israeli-Linked Hadassah Clinic in Moscow Treats Wounded Iranian IRGC Fighters Arts & Culture "Jurassic World Rebirth" Gets Streaming Date News China Launches Largest Ever Aircraft Carrier News Ayat Khaddoura's Final Video Captures Bombardment of Beit Lahia Business Egyptian Pound Undervalued by 30%, Says Goldman Sachs Videos & Features Tragedy Overshadows MC Alger Championship Celebration: One Fan Dead, 11 Injured After Stadium Fall Arts & Culture South Korean Actress Kang Seo-ha Dies at 31 after Cancer Battle Lifestyle Get to Know 2025 Eid Al Adha Prayer Times in Egypt Arts & Culture Lebanese Media: Fayrouz Collapses after Death of Ziad Rahbani

Trump's major China gamble has paid off so far. But Xi still holds trump cards
Trump's major China gamble has paid off so far. But Xi still holds trump cards

Egypt Independent

time2 days ago

  • Egypt Independent

Trump's major China gamble has paid off so far. But Xi still holds trump cards

President Donald Trump has placed a massive bet that the United States can take an historically aggressive stance against China, the world's second-largest economy, and emerge stronger because of it. Although it remains unclear if the gamble will pay off over the long term, Trump has been riding an incredible winning streak in recent months. The stock market is near record highs, the US economy rebounded in the second quarter and inflation has defied predictions of a surge after Trump put his tariffs in action. But Chinese leader Xi Jinping is on a winning streak of his own. On Monday, Trump opened the door to sending China faster AI chips after releasing previously blockaded mid-tier chips. And despite America's tariffs, China has successfully found other markets to sell to, flooding the world with its goods. That's because Xi holds a number of trump cards: China remains the world's biggest exporter of goods, wielding significant power across the world. It also maintains control of nearly the entire supply of the world's critical rare-earth minerals, necessary for manufacturing electronics and defense equipment crucial to America's national security and whose export Beijing has been slow-rolling their release, much to US consternation. And Xi has slow-walked a prize that Trump has long sought: a one-on-one meeting. Trump's wins Trump has played the role of the China bully this year, escalating the tariffs he placed on China in his first term – and continued by former President Joe Biden – to unprecedented levels. He set tariffs on Chinese goods at a minimum of 20 percent early in his second term, sending them to 145 percent in the middle of the spring and effectively blockading trade with America's second-largest trading partner. In May, negotiators between the two countries brought America's tariffs on Chinese goods imposed this year way down – to 30 percent. That felt better to US companies that rely on Chinese goods, even if it remains significantly higher than anything the United States has placed on a major trading partner in nearly a century. Over the course of the past few months, Trump's negotiators have secured several concessions from China, including purchases of US soybeans and a halt to antitrust investigations into some large American companies that threatened their ability to do business there. Those may not be major concessions, but as negotiations have continued, Trump has celebrated the tens of billions of dollars in tariff revenue that have flowed into the US Treasury each month, in large part because of the massive tariffs placed on China. Meanwhile, inflation has risen only slightly from four-year lows reached earlier this year. Last quarter's gross domestic product, the broadest measure of the US economy, showed a sharp rebound in growth, even though it was filled with warning signs. Jobs growth has slowed dramatically in recent months, but uncertainty about tariffs has largely eased, and some economists expect businesses to begin hiring again as a result in the coming months. And Trump's favorite indicator of success, the US stock market, has been booming, largely ignoring tariffs in favor of relatively strong earnings and a potential rate cut from the Federal Reserve in the next few months. So Trump has been able to come across as a strong foil to China, which he has labeled a national security threat and key economic competitor, while keeping the US economy from plunging into a recession – at least in the near term. That's no small feat. Xi's counter Despite Trump's bluster about China, America's president has treated Xi with relative leniency compared to the aggression he's shown toward US allies, including the European Union and Brazil, in recent months. That's because Xi is playing a very strong hand, too. China maintains an iron grip on rare-earth minerals used in ultra-strong magnets that are essential components in everything from cars to fighter jets. The United States deems them critical to the defense and industrial sectors, but China controls 90 percent of the global processing of rare earths. In various rounds of trade negotiations, the United States said it has won concessions that would give any US business that wants rare earths preferential treatment and access, but American companies continue to complain that China isn't issuing permits quickly enough to satisfy their needs. In exchange for doling out more rare earths, China has demanded a reduction in US export controls on critical goods – with a particular eye on advanced AI microchips. The Trump administration had drawn a line in the sand on AI chips, barring their delivery to China. But Monday, Trump reversed course, saying Nvidia's H20 chips that powered China's earth-shattering Deepseek AI model could flow somewhat freely into China. And he even said he would consider allowing Nvidia to ship a pared down version of its highest-end Blackwell chips, a concession that the White House had previously said was a nonstarter. Xi has also curried favor with Trump by agreeing to purchase US goods, including soybeans. Meanwhile, China's economy has kept pace by selling into new markets, including countries in South America and Africa, limiting disruption to its businesses. China's exports grew at 5.9 percent in the first half of 2025, the same pace as the first six months of 2024, according to ING. And China's trade surplus reached $586 billion in the first half, setting a new record for any six-month period. And Xi has power over something else that Trump truly covets: a meeting. Although Trump has claimed Xi promised to meet a date has not yet been set, and China has yet to confirm. So Xi is biding his time, leveraging his country's resources and export dominance. It's a strong hand to play against a president who has used tariffs to steamroll practically every other foreign leader in his path.

Elon Musk threatens to sue Apple over app store ranking of his AI app
Elon Musk threatens to sue Apple over app store ranking of his AI app

Egypt Independent

time2 days ago

  • Egypt Independent

Elon Musk threatens to sue Apple over app store ranking of his AI app

Elon Musk said his artificial intelligence start up xAI will sue Apple for allegedly favoring AI competitors in its App Store in what he called a breach of antitrust regulations. In a series of posts on X on Monday, a social media platform he owns, he accused Apple of only allowing xAI rival OpenAI's ChatGPT to claim the top spot in its rankings for mobile applications, and said his AI company would take 'immediate legal action.' 'Apple is behaving in a manner that makes it impossible for any AI company besides OpenAI to reach #1 in the App Store, which is an unequivocal antitrust violation,' he wrote. Grok, xAI's AI model, currently ranks 6th in the App Store's 'Top Free Apps' section for iPhones in the United States, while ChatGPT tops the list. 'Hey @Apple App Store, why do you refuse to put either X or Grok in your 'Must Have' section when X is the #1 news app in the world…Are you playing politics? What gives?' he wrote in a pinned post. CNN has reached out to xAI, Apple and OpenAI for comment. 'Apple's App Store curation appears biased, favoring established AI like ChatGPT (overall) over innovative challengers,' Grok wrote in a post on X, which was reposted by Musk. 'Editorial picks may reflect caution toward xAI's unfiltered style, but this stifles competition. Truth matters more than politics,' it wrote. Neither Grok nor Musk provided evidence to their claims. Grok by xAI, ChatGPT and Deepseek app icons seen in an iPhone screen. David Talukdar/Shutterstock In June 2024, Apple partnered with OpenAI to integrate ChatGPT services into its devices. In response, Musk threatened to ban Apple devices at his companies, including X, Tesla and SpaceX. It was unclear if he ultimately followed through. This is not the first time Apple's App Store operations has faced legal challenges. In April, a federal judge in California ruled the iPhone maker had violated a court order to reform its App Store for greater competition in app downloads and payment methods. The order stemmed from a high-profile antitrust suit in 2021 filed by the maker of the hit video game Fortnite, Epic Games, over Apple's monopoly on the distribution of IOS apps. The court then found Apple violated a California competition law and ordered the company to allow developers more freedom to direct users to alternative payment options. In a separate case in April, the European Commission fined Apple €500million ($570 million) for breaching a digital competition law by restricting app developers from steering users toward cheaper options outside the App Store. Last month, Apple appealed the fine to an European court.

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