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Showing posts with label Self Driving Car. Show all posts

Apple Cancels It's Ambitious Plan of Building an Electric Car

 

Ten years after it was first claimed that the maker of the iPhone was working on the project, Apple is reported to have scrapped its plan of making electric cars (EVs).

The project, which employs nearly two thousand people, has never been acknowledged by the company in public. 

According to Bloomberg News, many project workers will be transferred to the iPhone maker's artificial intelligence (AI) section. 

Apple's automobile team was reportedly named the Special Projects Group as part of CEO Tim Cook's Project Titan. 

The company was first reported to be working on a fully autonomous car without a steering wheel or pedals while it spent billions of dollars on research and development. However, the team was understood to still be years away from producing a vehicle. 

"This is a smart and long-awaited decision," Ray Wang, founder and chief executive of Silicon Valley-based consultancy Constellation Research stated. "The market demand for EVs is not there and AI is where all the action is.”

Apple has been looking at fresh opportunities beyond the iPhone and computers, such as its recently released Vision Pro virtual reality gear. 

Demand for EVs has slowed in recent months as borrowing prices remain high, making the market more competitive as big firms compete to acquire customers. In recent months, US automakers Ford and General Motors have postponed plans to increase EV output. 

Rivian, the developer of electric trucks, announced last week that it plans to reduce its personnel by 10% and intends to keep production the same this year. 

In January, Tesla warned that its sales growth would be slower this year than in 2023. The company, led by multibillionaire Elon Musk, has been lowering pricing in major areas across the world, including Europe and China, as it faces stiff competition from Chinese rivals like BYD. 

Emojis of a salute and a cigarette were used by Mr. Musk to respond to a story about the Apple project's demise on the social media platform X.

US Authority Investigates Pedestrian Threats at GM's Self-Driving Unit Cruise

 

U.S. auto safety regulators have launched an investigation into whether Cruise, a self-driving car from General Motors (GM.N), is using its autonomous robotaxis to protect pedestrians enough. 

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) stated that it has received two reports from Cruise regarding incidents involving injuries to pedestrians and has found two additional incidents via online footage.

The NHTSA stated that reports indicate that Cruise cars are "encroaching on pedestrians present in or entering roadways, including pedestrian crosswalks, in the proximity of the intended travel path of the vehicles," and that the issue "could increase the risk of a collision with a pedestrian, which may result in severe injury or death." 

A pedestrian was hit by a hit-and-run motorist on October 2 in San Francisco. After being flung into an adjacent lane, the pedestrian was struck again by a Cruise robotaxi, which was unable to stop in time and temporarily detained the pedestrian. 

The preliminary inquiry, which includes approximately 594 Cruise vehicles, is the first step before the agency may seek to order a recall. 

GM spends roughly $2 billion every year on Cruise, but the company says it represents a "giant growth opportunity." GM CEO Mary Barra reaffirmed in June that Cruise could produce $50 billion in annual sales by 2030. 

According to a representative for Cruise, the firm "has consistently cooperated with each of NHTSA's requests for information" and is in constant communication with the agency. 

The NHTSA launched a separate safety investigation of the Cruise cars' autonomous driving technology in December of last year in response to allegations of two injuries sustained in rear-end collisions. According to NHTSA, cruise cars "may engage in inappropriately hard braking or become immobilised." 

The California Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV) announced in August that it was looking into Cruise-related accidents in San Francisco following a collision involving a Cruise robotaxi and an emergency vehicle. Cruise obliged the DMV's order to remove half of the company's robotaxis from service. 

Cruise filed a petition in February 2022 asking for authorization to use up to 2,500 autonomous cars per year that are devoid of human controls like steering wheels. After announcing in July that it will make a decision "in the coming weeks," NHTSA stated on Tuesday that the petition is still being reviewed.

Despite significant backlash from local authorities and people, the California Public Utilities Commission voted in August to approve robotaxis from Cruise and Alphabet's (GOOGL.O) Waymo to drive around the clock.