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Tesla Believes Its Dojo AI System Will Help It Win the Self-Driving Car Race

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Last year during Tesla's AI Day, the automaker unveiled its Dojo supercomputer. At the time, Tesla claimed the supercomputer was the world's most powerful training machine and would help the automaker teach its vehicles how to drive without any inputs from a human driver. While Tesla officially announced the system last year, the automaker provided more information on its Dojo supercomputer this year at the Hot Chips conference. Dojo's job is to take all of the video Tesla gathers from its fleet of Tesla cars on the road today and process it to learn how cars drive in the real world. The training process is what represents the base for Tesla's Full Self Driving System.


Tesla: Impressive A.I. Day photo shows a key element of full self-driving

#artificialintelligence

Tesla's full self-driving system is taking shape -- and it's using an intricate tile to bring it to life. Earlier this month, the company hosted an Artificial Intelligence Day where it detailed its in-house capabilities. Tesla's upgraded computer systems are building out the company's planned autonomous driving feature, which will enable vehicles built after October 2016 to drive from A to B without any human intervention. During the event, Tesla unveiled the "training tile" designed to bring the feature to life. Want to find out more about the latest in the world of Tesla?


Tesla unveils Dojo supercomputer: world's new most powerful AI training machine

#artificialintelligence

At its AI Day, Tesla unveiled its Dojo supercomputer technology while flexing its growing in-house chip design talent. The automaker claims to have developed the fastest AI training machine in the world. For years now, Tesla has been teasing the development of a new supercomputer in-house optimized for neural net video training. Tesla is handling an insane amount of video data from its fleet of over 1 million vehicles, which it uses to train its neural nets. The automaker found itself unsatisfied with current hardware options to train its computer vision neural nets and believed it could do better internally. Over the last two years, CEO Elon Musk has been teasing the development of Tesla's own supercomputer called "Dojo."