Technology / Tesla Silicon Valley Swap: Apple Gets Back Top Engineer From Tesla Doug Field rumored to be working on Project Titan autonomous-car initiative By Jenn Gidman, Newser Staff Posted Aug 10, 2018 11:08 AM CDT Updated Aug 10, 2018 11:13 AM CDT Copied In this Dec. 7, 2011, file photo, a person stands near the Apple logo at the company's store in Grand Central Terminal in New York. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File) One Silicon Valley wheel just circled back to its starting point. A top Apple engineer who left in 2013 to join Tesla as its chief vehicle engineer is back with his former employer. The Verge reports that Doug Field, who'd been the VP of Mac hardware for the Cupertino giant, took a leave of absence from Tesla in May, followed by a full departure in June. Reuters and John Gruber at Daring Fireball got first confirmation on the development from Apple, along with whispers that Field is now working on Apple's hush-hush Project Titan self-driving car initiative (Apple didn't confirm that part). story continues belowNFL Star Rob Gronkowski Loves These ShoesShoes Much More Comfortable Than Traditional Dress Shoes. Italian Leather and Running Shoe Technology Providing First Class Comfort All Day Long.Wolf & ShepherdLearn MoreUndoAverage IQ is 100. What's Yours? Answer 20 multiple choice questions to find out.Avg IQ is 100. Find our your score in less than 10 minutes! Taken by over 1M users so far. 76,162 users tested today.Free IQ TestClick HereUndoOne of Time Magazine's Best Inventions of 2018 Can Save You Hundreds in Plumber FeesTubShroom on AmazonUndo VentureBeat calls Project Titan Apple's "unusually open secret," with claims "that Apple has flip-flopped between advancing and scaling back the project." Gruber says he's not ready to make too much of Field's return—and he notes that Apple and Tesla regularly swap employees—but he says it's an "interesting" move, as it suggests Apple might still be planning to churn out autonomous vehicles itself rather than simply making systems to place in other companies' vehicles. "That rumor never really made sense to me anyway," Gruber writes. "Apple's modus operandi has always been to make the whole widget." (More Tesla stories.) Report an error