cua cà mau cua tươi sống cua cà mau bao nhiêu 1kg giá cua hôm nay giá cua cà mau hôm nay cua thịt cà mau cua biển cua biển cà mau cách luộc cua cà mau cua gạch cua gạch cà mau vựa cua cà mau lẩu cua cà mau giá cua thịt cà mau hôm nay giá cua gạch cà mau giá cua gạch cách hấp cua cà mau cua cốm cà mau cua hấp mua cua cà mau cua ca mau ban cua ca mau cua cà mau giá rẻ cua biển tươi cuaganic cua cua thịt cà mau cua gạch cà mau cua cà mau gần đây hải sản cà mau cua gạch son cua đầy gạch giá rẻ các loại cua ở việt nam các loại cua biển ở việt nam cua ngon cua giá rẻ cua gia re crab farming crab farming cua cà mau cua cà mau cua tươi sống cua tươi sống cua cà mau bao nhiêu 1kg giá cua hôm nay giá cua cà mau hôm nay cua thịt cà mau cua biển cua biển cà mau cách luộc cua cà mau cua gạch cua gạch cà mau vựa cua cà mau lẩu cua cà mau giá cua thịt cà mau hôm nay giá cua gạch cà mau giá cua gạch cách hấp cua cà mau cua cốm cà mau cua hấp mua cua cà mau cua ca mau ban cua ca mau cua cà mau giá rẻ cua biển tươi cuaganic cua cua thịt cà mau cua gạch cà mau cua cà mau gần đây hải sản cà mau cua gạch son cua đầy gạch giá rẻ các loại cua ở việt nam các loại cua biển ở việt nam cua ngon cua giá rẻ cua gia re crab farming crab farming cua cà mau
Skip to main content

Elon Musk reportedly will blow $10 billion on AI this year

Elon Musk at Tesla Cyber Rodeo.
Digital Trends

Between Tesla and xAI, Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence aspirations have cost some $10 billion dollars in bringing training and inference compute capabilities online this year, according to a Thursday post on X (formerly Twitter) by Tesla investor Sawyer Merritt.

“Tesla already deployed and is training ahead of schedule on a 29,000 unit Nvidia H100 cluster at Giga Texas – and will have 50,000 H100 capacity by the end of October, and ~85,000 H100 equivalent capacity by December,” Merritt noted.

Recommended Videos

By the end of this year, Elon Musk's companies (Tesla & xAI) will have brought online roughly $10 billion worth of training compute capacity in 2024 alone.

Tesla already deployed and is training ahead of schedule on a 29,000 unit Nvidia H100 cluster at Giga Texas – and will have… pic.twitter.com/UgvmsBLuQp

— Sawyer Merritt (@SawyerMerritt) October 29, 2024

Tesla also revealed its Cortex AI cluster in August, which will be leveraged to train the company’s Full Self-Driving system and uses 50,000 Nvidia H100 GPUs along with another 20,000 Dojo AI chips developed by Tesla itself. The Colossus supercomputer, which Tesla unveiled in September, uses just as many H100 GPUs as the Memphis and is slated to expand by another 50,000 H100 and 50,000 H200 GPUs in the coming months.

xAI, on the other hand, began assembling its Memphis supercomputer in July at its Gigafactory of Compute, located in an old Electrolux production facility in Memphis, Tennessee. Musk claims that the Memphis is “the most powerful AI training cluster in the world,” as it runs on 100,000 Nvidia’s H100 GPUs, through Musk has promised to double that capacity in short order. It came online in September and has since been tasked with building the “world’s most powerful AI by every metric by December of this year” — likely, Grok 3. xAI has not disclosed how much the Memphis cost to build, though Tom’s Hardware estimates that the company has spent at least $2 billion on GPUs alone.

The $10 billion figure is actually half of what, in April, Musk claimed Tesla would spend this year on AI compute capacity. “Tesla will spend around $10 billion this year on combined training and inference AI, the latter being primarily in car,” he posted at the time. “Any company not spending at this level, and doing so efficiently, cannot compete.”

By that measure, Musk’s AI efforts are already falling behind deep-pocketed rivals like Microsoft, OpenAI, and Google. In July, for example, analysts estimated that OpenAI would spend around $7 billion on AI compute, while losing around $5 billion on other operating costs. However, the company announced in early October that its latest round of investment funding totaled $6.6 billion at a $157 billion post-money valuation. “The new funding will allow us to double down on our leadership in frontier AI research, increase compute capacity, and continue building tools that help people solve hard problems,” the company wrote in its announcement post.

Per a report from Reuters on Thursday, both Microsoft and Meta are spending freely to build out their respective AI compute capabilities. Microsoft is reportedly spending as much capital each quarter as it used to spend annually prior to 2020. The company also reports that its capital spending increased by more than 5% in the first quarter of 2024, to $20 billion, and expects to spend even more in Q2. Meta, on the other hand, has spent as much capital every quarter of 2024 as it did annually until 2017.

As for Google, it reportedly spent $13 billion on capital expenditures in Q3 2024, a 63% increase over the same period last year. What’s more, the company has dropped some $38 billion into compute infrastructure since the start of the year, an 80% jump from the first three quarters of 2023. Suddenly, $10 billion between a pair of companies and a handful of projects seems almost quaint.

Andrew Tarantola
Andrew Tarantola is a journalist with more than a decade reporting on emerging technologies ranging from robotics and machine…
Musk promises to deliver ‘the world’s most powerful AI’ by later this year
Elon Musk stands looking to his right.

Tesla CEO and Twitter/X owner Elon Musk announced Monday that his AI startups, xAI, had officially begun training its Memphis supercomputer, what he describes as “the most powerful AI training cluster in the world."

Once fully operational, Musk plans to use it to build "world’s most powerful AI by every metric by December of this year,” which presumably will be Grok 3.

Read more
Musk doubles down on promises for Optimus humanoid robots
The Tesla Suit Optimus with a black background.

Tesla is once again delaying the production of its Optimus humanoid robot, CEO Elon Musk announced on X (formerly Twitter) Monday.

During April's annual investor meeting, Musk told shareholders that Optimus would move into limited production in 2025 and predicted that "thousands" of the robots would be working in Tesla factories by the end of the year. He also hypothesized that sales of the robot, which is expected to retail for between $20,000 and $30,000, could add as much as $20 trillion to the company’s market capitalization.

Read more
Elon Musk tells Tim Cook he doesn’t want Apple’s ‘creepy spyware’
elon musk stylized image

Elon Musk has lashed out at Apple’s plan to partner with OpenAI to bring artificial intelligence features to the iPhone, telling Apple CEO Tim Cook directly to “stop this creepy spyware” and threatening to ban iPhones on the premises of his companies -- SpaceX, Tesla, and X (formerly Twitter).

Apple announced the partnership with the ChatGPT maker on the opening day of its Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) on Monday. But just a few hours later, Musk fired off a number of X posts expressing his annoyance at the plan, calling it “an unacceptable security violation.”

Read more