However, in many interviews with the media, when asked about an Apple car, I believed the real vision for any car project was to view it as a vehicle (pun intended) to deliver its apps and services.
Ten years, billions of dollars, multiple leadership changes, and dozens of rumors later, the Apple Car project is dead. A new report from Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman says that Apple has officially ...
The Apple car team was reportedly known as the Special Projects Group as part of its chief executive Tim Cook's Project Titan. As it spent billions of dollars on research and development ...
When did the rumors begin? The first reports date back to early 2015, when a camera-festooned car was shown to be leased to Apple. While some believed this was for Apple Maps, others suggested it ...
Before the Project Titan was scrapped, Apple reportedly worked with Chinese automaker BYD on custom batteries for Apple Car for years, but ultimately abandoned that partnership too. The California ...
Even though the much-discussed Apple Car has staged something of a comeback in recent months, "Project Titan," as the undertaking has been code-named, remains the unimpressive concatenation of ...
The Apple Car can be credited for bullishness this time ... the vehicle could be launched in as little as three to four years. Apple’s EV project and its timeline are very much in line with ...
Apple’s car is understood to be part of an ambitious but secretive programme - Project Titan. Apple has not commented on the 24 August collision, understood to be the company's first.
Having followed the up-to-now nearly inconsequential progress of the mysterious Project Titan, I'm ready to say that if you insist on thinking Apple will be selling an actual car by the next ...