Tesla ends Model S and X production to build humanoid robots
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Tesla's ending Model S and X production at its Fremont plant to build a million Optimus robots annually amid plunging profits and sales.
Tesla EVs have a new Autopilot computer and sensor suite dubbed HW4.5, making it even less likely that the HW3 vehicles will be supported for FSD Unsupervised
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Rise of the machines: Tesla ditches luxury EVs for robot army
Quick Read Tesla (TSLA) reported its first annual revenue decline with sales down 3% to $94.8B as EV deliveries fell 8.6%. Tesla is ending Model S and Model X production to repurpose Fremont factory lines for Optimus humanoid robots.
In a quiet yet significant move, Tesla has begun shipping the Model Y equipped with the new AI4.5 computer, marking an evolution in its Full Self-Driving (FSD) technology. This article will explore the discovery of this new hardware, its implications for Tesla owners, and the broader context of Tesla's hardware evolution.
Tesla is selling fewer cars and earning less, but it's doubling down on AI, autonomy, and robotics, reshaping itself beyond the auto industry.
The Model S and Model X played a crucial role in establishing Tesla's brand, helping prove that electric vehicles could compete with traditional cars. Over the last couple years however, demand and revenues have dropped for those models,
Tesla is reportedly preparing for one of the most symbolic strategic shifts in its history, News.Az reports. Final takeaway
The record spending will fund development of the Cybercab, a fully autonomous vehicle, along with the Tesla semi-truck and new battery and lithium facilities. CFO Vaibhav Taneja said most of the funds will support AI-related projects,
Space in the EV-maker’s Fremont factory will be used to produce one million Optimus 3 robots annually, Musk says.