The commute for thousands of Apple employees just got a whole lot longer.
The tech giant runs shuttle buses full of employees from San Francisco to its headquarters in Cupertino every day, and, according to a source inside the company, someone is attacking those buses — and breaking windows.
SEE ALSO: A Google bus was attacked outside of San Fransisco, just like buses from AppleOn an internal Apple email thread viewed by Mashable, one Apple employee speculated that the culprit may be firing "rubber rounds" at the buses. At least one of the buses only had the outer pane of its double-paned windows broken.
In response, late Tuesday night, Apple emailed employees to alert them that an untold number of shuttles would be rerouted, adding 30 to 45 minutes to riders' commute. Mashable obtained the email and has verified its authenticity.
Here is what the email said:
Subject: Coaches temporarily being rerouted
Due to recent incidents of broken windows along the commute route, specifically on highway 280, we’re re-routing coaches for the time being. This change in routes could mean an additional 30-45 minutes of commute time in each direction for some riders.
As always, the safety of our employees is our first priority. We’re working closely with law enforcement to investigate these incidents and we’ll notify you as soon as the coaches are able to return to the regular route. Thank you for your patience and understanding.
The Apple Commute Team
Mashable has reached out to both Apple and the local police to confirm whether the shuttles were being shot at, and we will update this when we hear back. At the time of publication, Apple and the local police were not able to confirm what object was shattering the windows. It could, of course, be rocks — but even rocks thrown at a moving vehicle on the highway could result in tragedy.
Officer Art Montiel, of the CHP, confirmed to Mashable that his agency is working with Apple to investigate, and that there have been several reports of an "unknown object" breaking shuttle windows.
Apple confirmed to Mashable that buses are indeed being rerouted, and that it is working with law enforcement to investigate.
While the exact method by which the buses are being attacked remains unclear, that fact that real damage has been done is not. At least four separate shuttles are said to have suffered broken windows while driving on 280.
According to the source, the incidents occurred on Jan. 12 and Jan. 16. One incident is said to have went down just outside of the city of Woodside, and another outside of Los Altos Hills.
A Google bus was reportedly also attacked.
Anti-shuttle sentiment once loomed large in San Francisco, where activists blamed riders for driving up rents in neighborhoods that included tech-bus routes. A group even took San Francisco to court over the practice in 2014, alleging that the city's pilot program of allowing tech companies to use city bus stops violated state law.
This story has been updated to note that a Google bus was also hit.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Apple shuttle buses rerouted following suspected attacks-雷电交加网
sitemap
文章
77255
浏览
73759
获赞
16466
Artists on Twitter are drawing their favorite shipping dynamics for this new meme
Once you've binge-watched enough Netflixshows, you start to see a pattern in the characters you getApple unveils iPhone 12 and iPhone 12 mini with 5G support
It's real and it's here: Apple finally announced the iPhone 12.The next in the ultra popular smartphElon Musk is now richer than Mark Zuckerberg
The fight to become the richest tech overlord is heating up. Thanks to Tesla's stock price rise follLi'l Sebastian to Seabiscuit: Horses of pop culture, ranked
For many millennials who labored under the daily grind of rural American culture, the fundamental hoThe dark side of college
College-bound vloggers are increasingly uploading "college decision reveal" videos to YouTube. But wFeds: Amazon staffers took bribes to prop up sketchy merchants, products
Sketchy merchants have been bribing Amazon employees and contractors to reinstate unsafe and counterCelebrity NFT drops, ranked
At some point two years ago, a malevolent individual snapped their fingers like Thanos and ushered iElon Musk: Tesla could be producing 20 million cars per year by 2030
Elon Musk has some predictions about the electric car market, and — surprise — they're qBitcoin wipes coronavirus losses, passes $10,000 again
There's a popular meme that shows Bitcoin on a perpetual rollercoaster. It's true: The world's largeOverwhelmed Americans reveal why they can't keep track of the news
Americans say they’re overwhelmed by the flood of news on the internet. And that’s causiIn France, you still get EarPods with new iPhones
Incroyable! Apple may have stopped shipping its wired EarPods with new iPhones, but apparently its nFacebook not happy Apple is forcing Gaming to launch on iOS without games
After many, many unsuccessful attempts to get into Apple's App Store, Facebook's Gaming app is finalInside the online communities where straight guys help other straight guys get off
May is National Masturbation Month, and we're celebrating withFeeling Yourself, a series exploring tHow to see your Spotify Pie chart, the latest viral website that analyzes your Spotify data
If there's one thing we know about social media users, it's that they're always down to share what mHow to reactivate your old Instagram account
If you disabled your Instagram account, you'll be happy to know it's not gone for good. You can stil