Zadesky, who previously worked with the iPod and iPhone teams,
is leaving for personal reasons not related to his performance,
the WSJ said. (http://on.wsj.com/1REazpb)
It was not clear when the 16-year veteran would leave Apple, the
Journal said. As of Friday afternoon his profile on LinkedIn
still listed him as working at Apple.
Apple declined to comment.
Apple has never acknowledged it is looking into building an
electric car, but the company has recruited dozens of auto
experts, many from car makers like Ford or Mercedes-Benz.
Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook went to BMW's <BMWG.DE>
headquarters in 2014, and senior Apple executives toured the
carmaker's Leipzig factory to learn how it manufactures the i3
electric car, sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.
The dialogue ended without conclusion because Apple, the world's
largest maker of electronic gadgets, appears to want to explore
developing a passenger car on its own, one of the sources said.
Also, BMW, the world's biggest seller of premium cars, is being
cautious about sharing its manufacturing know-how because it
wants to avoid becoming a mere supplier to a software or
Internet giant.
But one of the sources said the exploratory talks between senior
managers might be revived.
(Reporting by Rama Venkat Raman in Bengaluru; Editing by Mary
Milliken and Stephen R. Trousdale)
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