The Monday before Christmas isn’t usually the time you expect to hear any sort of automotive news worth a damn. Then again, 2020 hasn’t exactly been a usual year. Yesterday afternoon, Reuters dropped a hot potato of a report online for all to read: Apple’s “Project Titan” — the fabled, mythical Apple Car — is reportedly back on, and could arrive by 2024.
Citing anonymous sources reportedly close to the project, Reuters reported that Apple is not planning on building an autonomous robo-taxi like Amazon’s Zoox or Google’s Waymo, but rather, a “personal vehicle” like you’d buy at your local Toyota dealership. At the heart of the project reportedly lies a new battery design of Apple’s own creation for electric vehicles, which Reuters says uses fewer, larger battery cells to pack more electrolyte inside, giving the car greater range.
“It’s next level,” a source familiar with Apple’s battery technology told Reuters. “Like the first time you saw the iPhone.”
It’s all thrilling to read about for anyone who likes Apple or electric vehicles (or is interested in the future of transportation at all), but it still does beg the question: but why?
We’re not the only ones wondering such things. Even business-minded folks close to Apple are curious. “My initial reaction as a shareholder is, huh?” Hal Eddins, chief economist at Apple shareholder Capital Investment Counsel, told Reuters. “[I] still don’t really see the appeal of the car business, but Apple may be eyeing another angle than what I’m seeing.”
Apple, after all, has traditionally concerned itself with products and services that offer much higher profit margins and are easier to bring to market than cars and trucks, which are arguably among the most complex machines you can purchase without permission from the Department of Defense. Indeed, Apple has been extraordinarily successful doing just that; that strategy made it the first trillion-dollar company in history, then the first two trillion-dollar company in history, and now makes it the third-largest company in the world by market cap.