One of Apple's recent hires is Rónán Ó Braonáin, who previously served as Director of Engineering at Reviver, a company that makes digital license plates. Braonáin joined the company in August, and as seen on his LinkedIn page,
he's working on Apple Special Projects as a "Secret Agent." Presumably
that means he's part of the team working on Project Titan, the codename
for the Apple Car.
The profile, discovered by Electrek.co,
says Braonáin led the Reviver engineering team for five months. Before
that, he worked at Vision Fleet, building fleet management software to
read data from electric vehicles, and prior to that, he was a software
engineer at BMW working on connected car apps.
Reviver has produced Slate, a product dubbed "The World's First Digital
License Plate." The Slate is a connected plate that's able to do things
like monitor vehicle location and maintenance records and digitally send
payments for tolls and parking fees. It also alleviates the need for
physical stickers and manual registration processes.
Given Braonáin's short time at Reviver, it's not clear if Apple hired
him for the work he did on digital license plate technology, but it's
possible it's something Apple is considering for the Apple Car.
Braonáin is just one of dozens of hires with car-related expertise Apple has made in recent months. Apple has been hiring employees from companies like Chrysler, Tesla, NVIDIA, Volkswagen, and Ford, along with researchers who have expertise in autonomous vehicles and connected car systems.
Development on the Apple Car has sped up as of September of 2015, when the project reportedly received a "committed" label.
Apple is said to be targeting a 2019 completion date for the project
and will make additional hires in the coming months and years as work on
the car continues.
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