Designers speculate about what Apple s self-driving iCar might look like, Daily Mail Online
Could this be the iCar? Designers speculate about what Apple’s self-driving vehicle might look like as it’s exposed computer giant IS working on the technology
By Khaleda Rahman For Mailonline 17:Nineteen BST fifteen Aug 2015, updated Legitimate:21 BST fifteen Aug two thousand fifteen
- Refuelling rumours Apple is designing a car, reports state tech giant have talks with GoMentum Station in California
- Reportedly searching for location to test autonomous vehicles to rival designs already manufactured by Google
Eye-catching, sleek, incorporating Apple’s trademark sleek design, these are what the world’s graphic designers believe an iCar could look like.
Refuelling rumours the tech giant’s next big project is to bring a self-driving car to market, documents obtained by the Guardian say the company is searching for a location to test the autonomous vehicles to rival designs already manufactured by Google.
In May, engineers met with officials from GoMentum Station, a Two,100-acre former naval base near San Francisco, in a bid to set up a high-security site.
Typically secretive, the company – who recently launched the Apple See – have yet to confirm or deny the rumours – but that hasn’t stopped Apple fans speculating and imagining what it could look like.
In a correspondence obtained by the newspaper through a public records request, Apple engineer Frank Fearon wrote: ‘We would . like to get an understanding of timing and availability for the space, and how we would need to coordinate around other parties who would be using [it].’
The company did not confirm whether this was the case while others involved in the deal would not shed further light on the details.
‘We don’t know. They haven’t said what they want to test. It could be an iPhone,’ joked Jack Hall, program manager for connected vehicles and autonomous vehicles at GoMentum Station, which is operated by the Contra Costa Transportation Authority.
The agency is promoting a portion of the former Concord Naval Weapons Station as an ideal testing facility for carmakers and tech companies working on automotive technology.
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‘It’s got all the infrastructure of a city,’ Hall said of the facility. ‘There are buildings, streets and intersections, but no people.’
The Five,000-acre site has twenty miles of paved roads, including overpasses, tunnels and railroad crossings, according to the agency’s website, which calls it ‘the largest secure test facility in the world.’ Another 7,600 acres of the former navy base is now used as a shipping terminal by the U.S. Army.
GoMentum Station already has an agreement with Honda, which plans to test automated vehicle systems there.
Hall said his agency hopes to playmate with other companies for testing self-driving cars and ‘connected vehicles’ — cars that use the Internet and local networks to exchange a diversity of information with other devices and vehicles.
Apple has ‘shown interest’ in the facility but has not reached any agreement for testing there, Hall said. Company representatives have not actually visited yet, he said.
The Guardian also quoted another official at the transportation authority who said Apple insisted on a non-disclosure agreement which barred him from telling any more.
A number of automakers and tech companies, including Google, are working on fresh designs for autonomous and electric-powered vehicles.
In February, The Wall Street Journal cited unnamed sources who said Apple is working on designs for an electrical vehicle to be sold under the Apple brand. Analysts say Apple has the financial wherewithal and ambition to pursue such a project, albeit some believe it’s more likely interested in developing software for use in cars made by other companies.
Other evidence of Apple’s interest in cars has surfaced in latest months, including a lawsuit in which a Massachusetts startup working on electrical car batteries accused Apple of poaching some of its engineers. The lawsuit has since been lodged.