According to Bloomberg, Apple’s shady Exploratory Design Group is developing much cutting-edge technology.
Bloomberg recently updated with fresh details on Apple’s internal Exploratory Design Group, or “XDG.” The team keeps much information hidden even by Apple’s typically high standards. Within the group, people assigned to one project are not allowed to discuss their progress with group members assigned to other projects. Additionally, because people are arranged according to skill sets rather than particular projects, members of XDG work on multiple projects at once.
Within Apple, The Exploratory Design Group is a startup. There are only a few hundred of them, largely academics and engineers. That’s a far cry from the hundreds of employees working on Apple’s self-driving car in the Special Projects Group or the more than a thousand engineers constructing the mixed reality headgear in Apple’s Technical Development Group.
Members of XDG are urged to concentrate on projects until they can decide whether or not an idea is viable rather than “churn out” new features for gadgets like the iPhone. XDG also receives significant financial resources.
Bloomberg stated last week that XDG was responsible for Apple’s latest technological advancement in non-invasive blood glucose monitoring. The team is actively working on next-generation smartphone batteries, artificial intelligence, low-processor technologies, headgear devices with health features to assist those with eye disorders, and next-generation display technology. According to reports, iPhone, iPad, and Mac models have used chip and battery technology created by XDG for several years.