Elon Musk shrugged off fears about Apple being a new competitor and said that any Tesla (TSLA) employees it had hired were not important.
"They
have hired people we've fired. We always jokingly call Apple the 'Tesla
Graveyard'. If you don't make it at Tesla, you go work at Apple. I'm
not kidding," Musk told German newspaper Handelsblatt, while touring
Berlin.
When pushed on whether he took Apple's ambitions in the
auto sector seriously, the billionaire's response was even more
scathing, mocking the Cupertino, CA-based company's latest products.
"Did you ever take a look at the Apple Watch?," Musk said.
"No,
seriously: It's good that Apple is moving and investing in this
direction. But cars are very complex compared to phones or smartwatches.
You can't just go to a supplier like Foxconn and say: Build me a car."
Apple was not immediately available for comment.
Speculation has been building all year
that Apple is looking to develop its own electric car and jump into the
auto sector. In July, Apple hired industry veteran Doug Betts, who led
global quality at Fiat Chrysler Automobiles. And in August, "Project
Titan" – the name for Apple's car project – got more credibility after
reports that the firm was looking for an area to test the car in Silicon
Valley.
As recently as last month, Apple executives met with
officials from California's automotive sector to discuss self-driving
vehicles.
An Apple car – whether it be electric or driverless – will compete directly with the likes of Tesla and the traditional carmakers from BMW to Mercedes.
Silicon
Valley's biggest technology firms are also looking at the auto space.
Google is currently testing its own vehicle while taxi app Uber poached researchers from Carnegie Mellon University to work on autonomous driving technology.
At
the same time, traditional car makers are looking to fend off the
threat. Earlier this year, a conglomerate of German car makers bought Nokia's HERE mapping system which is seen as a key component of autonomous driving.
Musk however admitted that a car would make sense for Apple.
"But
for Apple, the car is the next logical thing to finally offer a
significant innovation. A new pencil or a bigger iPad alone were not
relevant enough," Musk said.
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