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Apple could be Tesla's biggest threat, analyst says
rbnetengr said:There are many cars that have been on the market for years that will turn on a reminder to get a service (Oil, Brakes, etc). But many of these have no basis in reality. After all, why would anyone who cares about maintaining his/her $70k (or much more) BMW, Mercedes Benz, etc. have the oil changed once per year because “the car told me”? Manufacturers who provide ‘free’ maintenance under warranty, like BMW, are clearly wanting to do the minimum amount of maintenance under warranty. That’s why so many BMWs on the used market have engine issues, because they had three oil changes in 50k miles, rather than ten! And there’s no way that anyone, even Apple, could determine that the tires, brakes, wheel bearings, etc are worn and need service. They are all just time/ usage estimations, and why would Apple be any better at doing that than manufacturers who have built cars for decades?
Also, who is going to service these Apple vehicles if Apple doesn’t have a dealer network? Pep Boys? Firestone? Midas? Eddie’s Auto Shop?Regarding your statement about fleets of vehicles...that’s exactly the opposite of Apple, who builds products that cater to individuals. The last thing that Apple would want with an Apple Car would be a plain autonomous drone that blends into the automotive background.It makes no sense (to me) for Apple to venture so far outside their market space, and produce vehicles. I’m a huge Apple fanboy (currently have two MacBook Pros, two iPhones, two AppleTVs, an iPad, an Apple Watch, and an old iMac that needs to go away), but I do not see any motivation for me to own an Apple Car. I don’t want an autonomous pod to chauffeur me around as I snap selfies and update my social media. I am a driver, and enjoy the experience of driving.Apple doesn’t need a dealer network, they are not selling cars. They would simply need hubs where cars would come and charge and where Apple staff would do service checks on the vehicles. Not so different from the service that apple stores currently provide people with product issues. The only difference is that the cars would be driving themselves to these locations to be serviced. And with the slow roll out into major cities, they would not need a ton of these locations. They would build out as needed.I am not sure I understand your comment that fleets of apple vehicles being opposite of Apple. Why would one assume drones that they are building would blend into the background. I would suspect that these cars would definitely stand out from what is on the road today. It would be obvious to anyone looking at traffic that you would be in an apple car.It doesn’t sound like you would be a person that would be using this hypothetical service that I’ve described and that is fine. I enjoy driving too. I also enjoy driving newer vehicles so that I don’t have to worry about repairs or about potential break downs and then being out a car. But I am also aware that it is costly for my wife and I to continually be leasing vehicles. We could buy and then sell but that’s another hassle. However, I could see us at some point in the future leasing one vehicle and then using this service for when we need two vehicles. I mean why would I be spending 700+ a month on a lease/insurance/fuel when I could pay for an apple car service. Sure I could just use a taxi service BUT it would not provide me with the individual personalizations that would make the journey that much more enjoyable. -
Apple could be Tesla's biggest threat, analyst says
JWSC said:So, here we are almost 7 years since the original project Titan was first mentioned. Since that time Tesla’s technology has advanced considerably. Other EV auto makers have entered the field. And the traditional auto industry has made significant moves into the EV market.
I must ask, what gap in the market can Apple fill with their own potential offerings? What is every other potential competitor missing? Admittedly, this could be due to a lack of imagination on my part, even though I have given this considerable thought.
It’s possible that Apple could pull an “iPhone” and announce an automobile that is well beyond the imagination of the enthusiasts on this forum and EV enthusiasts in general. But with Tesla so far ahead of everyone else in motor, battery, and autonomous technology, that’s going to be a tall order for Apple. Tesla likely has hundreds of millions of actual road miles to feed into their AI learning algorithms. Apple’s road miles wouldn’t even occupy one pixel on a chart if you put them side-by-side to scale.
Look at SpaceX - reusable rockets as standard operating procedure. A few small start-ups dipping their toes in reusability. And the rest of the big players got nothin’.
So I am asking, what can, what must, Apple do to differentiate their automotive offerings from everyone else’s? Because if Apple can’t do that they will get creamed.
Then you consider some of Apple’s possible costs... the maintenance on electric vehicles versus combustion vehicles, electric wins hands down. For the replacement parts (tires/brakes), these can be easily monitored and replaced on a schedule (something that Apple is exceptionally good at). The avoidance of having to build dealerships (as you are not selling cars).When I ask the question how much mark up can one make on the sale of a car? My guess is on the low side of things. I don’t see how Apple makes its usual percentage on selling vehicles. But if they create fleets of vehicles and slowly dispatch them in major cities they are not competing with vehicle makers directly; rather, they are coming at them from a position that fits Apple’s playbook and next thing you know the game has changed and Apple is in a dominant position in very quick fashion... say 10 years?? -
Apple rumored to invest $3.6B in Kia to produce 100,000 'Apple Cars' per year
ramanpfaff said:I'm ready to buy if it's less than $65k. -
Apple speeds up masked Face ID by detecting an Apple Watch in iOS 14.5
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Apple Car could be made in the US by Hyundai in 2024
It’ll be interesting to see how this all unfolds. I personally think that Apple’s car efforts are service based; they will not be sold to individual buyers but rather be an autonomous taxi service. You could have different tiers of service from unlimited for say 300 a month (just throwing a number out there) to someone looking for 10 uses a month for, maybe something like 50/month. It’s a guess, but I just can’t see them entering the market on the terms of how the car market is currently.