Apple is restructuring its driverless car technology project after confirming 200 job losses from the team.
The job cuts were first reported by US news outlet CNBC and then confirmed by an Apple spokesperson. Further employees are expected to move back to other departments within the Californian company.
In 2018 Apple re-hired Doug Field, former hardware engineer at the firm, from an engineering role at Tesla. He was put in place to lead the autonomous programme, dubbed Project Titan. It is thought that work will still continue on driverless software and hardware within the programme.
Apple CEO Tim Cook confirmed it had ditched its plan to build an autonomous car in 2017. Following Cook's comments that Apple would continue developing autonomous car technology but has halted development of its own car, five anonymous sources told The New York Times that issues arose from a lack of direction in the project.
Some leading employees wanted to develop a fully autonomous car, while others were convinced that a semi-autonomous vehicle was more appropriate. The delays these discussions caused put Apple behind its main rivals, leading to the shelving of the original project.
Speaking to Bloomberg in 2017, Cook explained that the technology giant was now completely focused on developing an autonomous system - something he said was "a core technology that we view as very important". He said the work was “probably one of the most difficult [artificial intelligence] projects to work on".
Apple, which had reportedly been working on its so-called iCar project late into 2016, had failed to close a supply deal with BMW and Daimler for its systems. ABI Research senior analyst James Hodgson believes this, and its project shift, could have cost Apple in the race to help produce a fully driverless car. “[Apple was] slow to begin testing autonomous systems and now it has a considerable innovation gap to close,” he said.
Join the debate
manicm
It's still a joke...
Overdrive
manicm wrote:
Presumably Tesla didn't know much about the autonomous driving before started on the technology either, and they haven't been dong this for that long either. It's not difficult to employ the right engineers, designers etc to bring in the knowhow, especially given Apple's enormous multi-billion dollar cash pile.
winniethewoo
I would guess...
Symanski
Technology Transfer.
Ravon
Where are McLaren monocells made ?
xxxx
like the google car
typos1 - Just can’t respect opinion
Walking
Who makes what
Cyborg
Apple
Cyborg
xxxx
One by One
typos1 - Just can’t respect opinion
eseaton
Agree. You often get the
Pages
Add your comment