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Apple’s ‘next big thing’: home robotics take precedence at iPhone maker after electric car cancelled

  • Engineers at Apple have been exploring a mobile robot that can follow users around their homes, sources told Bloomberg
  • Apple is under growing pressure to find new sources of revenue after scrapping its EV project, and amid a nascent foray into mixed-reality goggles

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The Apple logo illuminated at a store in Munich, Germany, on November 13, 2023. Photo: AP
Apple has teams investigating a push into personal robotics, a field with the potential to become one of the company’s ever-shifting “next big things”, according to people familiar with the situation.
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Engineers at Apple have been exploring a mobile robot that can follow users around their homes, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the skunk-works project is private. The iPhone maker also has developed an advanced table-top home device that uses robotics to move a display around, they said.

Though the effort is still in the beginning stages – and it’s unclear if the products will ultimately be released – Apple is under growing pressure to find new sources of revenue. It scrapped an electric vehicle project in February, and a push into mixed-reality goggles is expected to take years to become a major moneymaker.

With robotics, Apple could gain a bigger foothold in consumers’ homes and capitalise on advances in artificial intelligence. But it’s not yet clear what approach it might take. Though the robotic smart display is much further along than the mobile bot, it has been added and removed from the company’s product road map over the years, according to the people.

The robotics work is happening within Apple’s hardware engineering division and its AI and machine-learning group, which is run by John Giannandrea. Matt Costello and Brian Lynch – two executives focused on home products – have overseen the hardware development. Still, Apple hasn’t committed to either project as a company, and the work is still considered to be in the early research phase. A spokeswoman declined to comment.

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