Skip to main content

Elon Musk’s new AI company aims to ‘understand the universe’

Elon Musk has just formed a new company that will seek to “understand the true nature of the universe.” No biggie, then.

Announced on Wednesday, the company, xAI, already has among its ranks artificial intelligence (AI) experts formerly of firms such as DeepMind, OpenAI, Google Research, Microsoft Research, and Tesla.

The website for Musk’s new company currently comprises a single page with a profile of its top team and a call for experienced engineers and researchers to join the company in the Bay Area, San Francisco. It also includes the line: “The goal of xAI is to understand the true nature of the universe.”

Meanwhile, in a tweet announcing the new initiative, Musk said xAI will aim to “understand reality.”

Announcing formation of @xAI to understand reality

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) July 12, 2023

xAI co-founder Greg Yang, a senior software engineer who’s worked at Apple, Google, and Microsoft, tweeted that the “mathematics of deep learning is profound, beautiful, and unreasonably effective,” adding that “developing the ‘theory of everything’ for large neural networks will be central to taking AI to the next level.” Yang added: “Conversely, this AI will enable everyone to understand our mathematical universe in ways unimaginable before.”

There’s really not a lot of other information about the ambitious-sounding endeavor at this time. However, xAI is planning to hold a Twitter Spaces event at a currently unspecified time on Friday, July 14, so more details should be revealed then.

It’s been rumored for some time that Musk, who currently leads SpaceX and Tesla and also owns Twitter, has been interested in getting his foot in the AI door.

In fact, he’s already been there, having been an early backer of OpenAI, the company behind the viral chatbot ChatGPT. Apparent disagreements over the approach to AI safety led Musk to split from OpenAI in 2018, several years before last year’s launch of the company’s powerful generative AI tool.

Musk’s second serious attempt to enter the sector looks very much like a bid to challenge the dominance of OpenAI, which now has backing from Microsoft to the tune of billions of dollars. However, some will be interested to see how the launch fits with his call in March for a six-month pause in the development of more advanced AI tools so that a set of agreed safety protocols can be agreed upon among industry players.

With a slew of AI companies already developing increasingly sophisticated tools for a range of tasks for both businesses and consumers, Musk looks late to the game. This could be partly down to his preoccupation with Twitter, which has been experiencing a chaotic time since he bought the company in October.

But now Musk will be hoping that by attracting the right team he can have a meaningful impact and challenge the current big hitters in the AI game.

Editors' Recommendations

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
This app just got me excited for the future of AI on Macs
The ChatGPT website on a laptop's screen as the laptop sits on a counter in front of a black background.

In a year where virtually every tech company in existence is talking about AI, Apple has been silent. That doesn't mean Apple-focused developers aren't taking matters into their own hands, though. An update to the the popular Mac writing app iA Writer just made me really excited about seeing what Apple's eventual take on AI will be.

In the iA Writer 7 update, you’ll be able to use text generated by ChatGPT as a starting point for your own words. The idea is that you get ideas from ChatGPT, then tweak its output by adding your distinct flavor to the text, making it your own in the process. Most apps that use generative AI do so in a way that basically hands the reins over to the artificial intelligence, such as an email client that writes messages for you or a collaboration tool that summarizes your meetings.

Read more
New ‘poisoning’ tool spells trouble for AI text-to-image tech
Profile of head on computer chip artificial intelligence.

Professional artists and photographers annoyed at generative AI firms using their work to train their technology may soon have an effective way to respond that doesn't involve going to the courts.

Generative AI burst onto the scene with the launch of OpenAI’s ChatGPT chatbot almost a year ago. The tool is extremely adept at conversing in a very natural, human-like way, but to gain that ability it had to be trained on masses of data scraped from the web.

Read more
Qualcomm says its new chips are 4.5 times faster at AI than rivals
Two Qualcomm Snapdragon chips.

Qualcomm just announced two powerful new processors that excel at generative AI, one for laptops and the other for phones. As the potential applications for artificial intelligence continue to expand from text to images, video, and beyond, faster processing on your own device is becoming more important.

The Snapdragon X Elite is Qualcomm's exciting new laptop processor, boasting best-in-class CPU performance for Windows laptops and impressive GPU speed. For phones, the Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 blasts by the previous generation with 30% greater speed while drawing 20% less energy from your battery.

Read more