End of the Road: Apple's Ambitious Car Project Officially Scrapped
by AutoExpert | 11 March, 2024
Apple's car project is finally dead. After a decade, billions of dollars spent, and more twists and turns than an F1 race, it's over. Employees always had a sneaking suspicion it wasn't gonna work... they nicknamed it "Project Titanic." Ouch.
So, how did a company like Apple get it so wrong? Let's rewind to the beginning...
The Dream: Apple Hits the Road
Back in 2014, everyone was going nuts over self-driving cars. Google was showing them off, Tesla was taking off – Silicon Valley was convinced this was the future. Of course, Apple didn't want to be left eating dust.
But there were problems from day one. Apple was already a massive company, and its engineers were getting restless after the Apple Watch. Rumors were flying that top talent might jump ship to Tesla. So, Tim Cook greenlit the car project, partly just to keep those engineers happy.
Plus, let's be real... iPhones weren't going to sell forever. Cars are a HUGE market, a tempting target for a company used to breaking records.
Trouble in Paradise: Too Many Cooks
This project was doomed from the start because nobody could agree on what the heck they were building. The original head honcho wanted a Tesla rival, Apple's design guru wanted some futuristic self-driving pod. All the while, new hires (who weren't used to Apple's way of doing things) were flooding in. Chaos!
There were whispers of talks to buy Tesla outright, but Apple's ego wouldn't allow it. Imagine that though!
The Apple Car: Imagine...
Picture this: a van-looking thing, like a fancy European minivan. No steering wheel, you'd control everything with Siri (remember, this was years ago). They were planning on tech like special windows and sunroofs... the kind of crazy stuff you expect from Apple.
The higher-ups loved it, at least in theory. Thing is, by 2016, everyone on the ground knew this thing had more holes than Swiss cheese. The original project head bounced, and they completely pivoted to just the self-driving software.
The Slow, Painful Decline
Think of how many iPhones Apple's released in a decade... the car project had that many different leaders. Layoffs, reboots, the whole nine yards. They test-drove souped-up Lexuses, partnered with VW for fancy shuttles... none of it was actually getting them closer to a real car people would buy.
In the end, Apple went full circle... just a fancy electric car with some Tesla-like features. A decade wasted to get back to where they started.
The Bitter End: AI Wins
Apple finally pulled the plug this week, admitting that "generative AI" (those crazy chatbots and image generators) were a better bet. Honestly, good call – that tech could seriously boost their core iPhone business.
So, the car's dead, but not in vain. They'll use what they learned about tech and automation on future goodies – robot assistants, fancy AirPods with cameras, who knows what else. Some of those car team folks might be designing the next big thing, others are probably polishing up their resumes.
The Takeaway
This whole story proves even Apple can stumble. Maybe it's what happens when a company gets SO big that crazy ideas are tougher to kill. Or maybe self-driving cars really were just a whole lot harder than anyone thought back then. Either way, the "Apple Car" is now a legendary tech flop.