Skip to main content

Apple sheds 200 employees from its mysterious self-driving car program

For months, Apple has remained quiet about its plans to develop autonomous technology for cars. It broke its silence in January 2019 to announce a round of over 200 layoffs, but the company stresses autonomy will play a significant role in moving society forward in the coming years, and it’s not throwing in the towel completely.

Anonymous Apple employees with inside knowledge of Project Titan, the name of Apple’s self-driving car research initiative, revealed the layoffs to CNBC. The company later confirmed the report. The insiders suggested the layoffs are tied to Project Titan’s new leadership. Apple appointed Doug Field, Tesla’s former vice president of engineering, at the head of Project Titan in August 2018 and the executive is still making changes to his team.

Recommended Videos

“We have an incredibly talented team working on autonomous systems and associated technologies at Apple. As the team focuses their work on several key areas for 2019, some groups are being moved to projects in other parts of the company, where they will support machine learning and other initiatives, across all of Apple,” a spokesperson for the company told CNBC.

Some of the laid-off employees will leave Apple, while others will move to different departments within the company. The company hasn’t revealed whether it dismissed engineers, designers, or other positions. The layoffs don’t signal the end of the company’s research in the field of autonomous technology, though. The spokesperson added Apple sees a huge opportunity in autonomous systems, and it stresses that it has unique capabilities to contribute to the advancement of this technology. “This is the most ambitious machine learning project ever,” the spokesperson opined.

None of this sheds light on how, when, where, or why Apple will enter the automotive industry. In 2015, rampant rumors claimed the Cupertino, California-based tech giant wanted to build its own car from the ground up. The reports of a so-called Apple Car cooled in the wake of a 2016 round of layoffs followed by a credible report that outlined Apple’s plans to buy an existing automaker instead of starting from scratch. Many pointed to Tesla, then McLaren, but neither deal went through. The BMW i3-based Apple Car never happened, either. As of 2019, it sounds like Apple is more interested in developing the software and hardware needed to power an autonomous car than in competing against Ford and Dodge with a standalone vehicle.

Ronan Glon
Ronan Glon is an American automotive and tech journalist based in southern France. As a long-time contributor to Digital…
Uber gives up on developing its own self-driving car
Uber self-driving car

Uber has announced it's selling its self-driving car unit, although it isn’t entirely cutting its interest in autonomous vehicles.

The company will sell its autonomous-vehicle unit -- Advanced Technologies Group (ATG) -- to Aurora, a Silicon Valley-based company founded in 2017 by former contributors to self-driving-car projects operated by Google (now Waymo) and Uber.

Read more
Lockdown couldn’t keep Waymo from testing self-driving cars … in a fake city
waymo self driving car testing

Self-driving car testing on public roads gets most of the headlines, but that was no longer an option for Waymo once the coronavirus pandemic hit the United States earlier this year. With shelter-in-place orders in effect, Waymo's testing program retreated behind the walls of a closed-course facility called Castle.

Castle is a 113-acre self-driving car testing facility built on the former Castle Air Force Base in Atwater, California, about two hours southeast of San Francisco. Since 2013, Waymo has been using the site to run prototype cars through the toughest scenarios engineers could come up with. This so-called "structured testing" has always been part of the process of developing autonomous cars, but during the worst of the pandemic, it became the main way to keep that process going. Waymo pulled its test cars off public roads in March (it also suspended operations at Castle for a time during that period), and resumed operations in Arizona in May.

Read more
Apple creates a face mask for its employees
apple creates a face mask for its employees masks2

Apple has designed a face mask to give to its employees to help curb the spread of the coronavirus. 

The tech giant created the Apple Face Mask which was developed by the same teams that work on the iPhone and iPad designs, according to Bloomberg. Apple’s retail and corporate employees will reportedly start receiving the masks over the next two weeks. 

Read more