Okay, so here’s the thing. Grok’s now in Teslas—not all of them, just the ones with AMD’s Ryzen. If your car’s chilling with Intel, well, tough luck for now.
Moving on—Grok’s like the cool new kid on the block, helping folks navigate their drives without breaking a sweat. The catch? Intel systems are sitting this one out. Why? Performance, apparently. Sounds like AMD’s Ryzen has some magic sauce that makes Grok work all fancy-like. Anyway—or maybe this is the part I backtrack—it’s said Tesla had to go with Ryzen ’cause Intel just couldn’t keep up. Sad? Maybe. True? Probably.
Oh, and there’s this tweet going on and on about it. Like, scroll through and you’ll see stuff about where to find your car’s processor details. (Curiosity bait, much?) Just cruise to Settings > Software > Additional Vehicle Info to spy what chip’s powering your ride. Simple.
Now, Grok’s still a bit hands-off—I mean, it can chat and stuff but not quite fiddle with your car controls. But, hey, sounds fun enough for a test drive. Especially if your Tesla’s one of those snazzy Ryzen types.
Here’s a curveball for you: Tesla’s been dancing with Intel until they waltzed over to AMD’s Ryzen in 2021. Those Ryzen chips, V3000 Series with Zen 3 architecture (fancy talk, I know), are the big deal now. That’s the word on the street, anyway. Old Intel models? Just a hint of hope they’d get Grok eventually, but let’s not hold our breath.
The latest software update—2025.26—is where Grok turns up. If you’re up for some amusing banter from your car, make sure you’re running the latest version. And that’s about it. I think.