Apple has scaled back ambitious self-driving plans for its future electric vehicle and postponed the carтАЩs target launch date by about a year to 2026, according to people with knowledge of the matter.
The car project, called Titan inside the company, has been in limbo for the past several months as Apple executives grappled with the reality that its vision for a fully autonomous vehicle тАФ without a steering wheel or pedals тАФ isnтАЩt feasible with current technology.
In a significant shift for the project, the company is now planning a less-ambitious design that will include a steering wheel and pedals and only support full autonomous capabilities on highways, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the information is private.
The latest changes underscore the challenge Apple faces in pushing into an entirely new product category and taking on technological obstacles that have bedeviled some of the worldтАЩs biggest companies. The secretive project, underway for years, is meant to provide Apple with another major moneymaker, but it also could test the limits of the iPhone makerтАЩs capabilities.
Apple currently plans to develop a vehicle that lets drivers conduct other tasks тАФ say, watch a movie or play a game тАФ on a freeway and be alerted with ample time to switch over to manual control if they reach city streets or encounter inclement weather.
The company has discussed launching the feature in North America initially and then improving and expanding it over time.
A spokeswoman for Apple declined to comment.
Level 5 autonomy
AppleтАЩs previous vision for the car was to offer Level 5 autonomy тАФ the pinnacle of self-driving technology, which no automaker has attained. The current plan is considered below that because of its more limited scope.
ItтАЩs the latest strategy shift for the Apple car team, which has faced turnover in its executive ranks ever since its inception a decade ago. Current leader Kevin Lynch has aimed to bring more stability and a focus on practical goals after years of priority changes and even some layoffs.