Elon Musk Announces Tesla's New Engineering Headquarters in California

By Lennon Cihak
Tesla's moving global engineering headquarters to California
Tesla's moving global engineering headquarters to California
Tesla

Tesla CEO Elon Musk and California governor Gavin Newsom have announced a new global engineering headquarters in California.

In the opening remarks, Musk mentioned it’s a bit of a poetic transition from the company that founded Silicon Valley, Hewlett Packard, to now Tesla. Musk also said that Tesla’s Fremont factory is expected to manufacture 600,000 vehicles in 2023, if all goes well.

Newsom briefly discusses California’s growth over the last few years and how he’s proud to partner with Tesla to continue pioneering innovation and modern day engineering.

“California is the largest manufacturing state—people forget that,” Governor Gavin Newsom explained. “[...] now the fourth largest economy in the world. Eat your heart out, Germany.

“I couldn’t be more proud of California’s commitment to support Tesla over the course of the last few decades,” Newsom adds. “It’s demonstrable in terms of policy; in terms of direction, more broadly. Interestingly, regulation, dare I say, for all its good and evil, depending on which side of it you’re on, but the regulatory framework accelerated investment.”

Elon Musk Announces Tesla's New Engineering HQ

The new office space, which was previously the headquarters for Hewlett Packard, is located in Palo Alto, the city of Tesla’s previous headquarters. After Musk’s debacle with Alameda County’s handling of the COVID-19 response, Musk moved Tesla’s headquarters to Austin, Texas. At the time, Tesla was focusing on its Gigafactory in Austin as well as the Cybertruck.

Despite Musk’s rocky past with California, Tesla continues to invest in California heavily. The state recently surpassed Germany in terms of the strongest world economy. California is also Tesla’s strongest market for electric vehicles.

Watch the Event

Tesla has Gigafactories located in multiple parts of the world, including Sparks, Nevada; Berlin, Germany; Buffalo, New York; and Shanghai, China.

Tesla Increases Price of Model S; Starts Offering Free Lifetime Supercharging

By Karan Singh
Not a Tesla App

For the first time in quite a while, Tesla has increased the price of one of its vehicle offerings. The Model S Long Range and the Model S Plaid have both received a hefty price increase. However, not all is bad - as Tesla also added a new benefit for buyers.

Price Increase

The price increase for the Model S is $5,000 - currently only in the United States. This price increase will likely impact other markets, including Canada, in the coming days.

The Model S Long Range now starts at $79,990, while the Model S Plaid now starts at $94,990. The Model S and Model X now have the same starting price. Interestingly, that’s also the same pricing point for the Cybertruck AWD and Cyberbeast Trimotor non-Foundation Series. 

The vehicle configuration does not appear to have changed, so the new pricing is simply an increase rather than the addition or removal of features. Tesla previously cut the price of the Model S and Model X by 15% in 2023, so this could simply be an adjustment to ensure that the vehicle pricing stays in line with inflation and other factors.

Free Lifetime Supercharging

For those on the fence about ordering a Model S, Tesla has brought back Free Lifetime Supercharging when you order a new Model S on or after December 13, 2024. As always, Free Lifetime Supercharging is restricted to the buyer’s Tesla account and to that specific vehicle. It cannot be transferred to another vehicle or another owner after ownership transfer. It’s worth noting, that it also doesn’t exclude the owner from receiving Supercharger idle fees or congestion fees. There is currently no end date for this promotion.

There are currently no changes to the Model X, neither a price increase nor the addition of Lifetime Superchargering. However, when Tesla makes changes to one of their premium vehicles, it usually affects the other one as well. So be on the lookout for potential changes to the Model X offering in the coming days.

We’ve seen Tesla value Lifetime Supercharging at $5,000, so this falls in line with the price increase we’re seeing. It’s possible that Tesla will begin to bring back Lifetime Supercharging as a perk for buying into their more premium Model S and Model X cars, or this could be another temporary promotion to get buyers who are on the fence to go ahead and make their purchase while this promotion lasts.

Tesla’s Optimus Robot Learns to Walk Without Vision [VIDEO]

By Karan Singh
Optimus Falls - but catches itself!
Optimus Falls - but catches itself!
Not a Tesla App

Tesla recently showed off a demo of Optimus, its humanoid robot, walking around in moderately challenging terrain—not on a flat surface but on dirt and slopes. These things can be difficult for a humanoid robot, especially during the training cycle.

A Look Behind the Curtain

Most interestingly, Milan Kovac, VP of Engineering for Optimus, clarified what it takes to get Optimus to this stage. Let’s break down what he said.

Optimus is Blind

Optimus is getting seriously good at walking now - it can keep its balance over uneven ground - even while walking blind. Tesla is currently using just the sensors, all powered by a neural net running on the embedded computer. 

Essentially, Tesla is building Optimus from the ground up, relying on as much additional data as possible while it trains vision. This is similar to how they train FSD on vehicles, using LiDAR rigs to validate the vision system’s accuracy. While Optimus doesn’t have LiDAR, it relies on all those other sensors on board, many of which will likely become simplified as vision takes over as the primary sensor.

Today, Optimus is walking blind, but it’s able to react almost instantly to changes in the terrain underneath it, even if it falls or slips. 

What’s Next?

Next up, Tesla AI will be adding vision to Optimus - helping complete the neural net. Remember, Optimus runs on the same overall AI stack as FSD - in fact, Optimus uses an FSD computer and an offshoot of the FSD stack for vision-based tasks.

Milan mentions they’re planning on adding vision to help the robot plan ahead and improve its walking gait. While the zombie shuffle is iconic and a little bit amusing, getting humanoid robots to walk like humans is actually difficult.

There’s plenty more, too - including better responsiveness to velocity and direction commands and learning to fall and stand back up. Falling while protecting yourself to minimize damage is something natural to humans - but not exactly natural to something like a robot. Training it to do so is essential in keeping the robot, the environment around it, and the people it is interacting with safe.

We’re excited to see what’s coming with Optimus next because it is already getting started in some fashion in Tesla’s factories.

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