Mansfield heading to nebulous 'special projects,' but is he eyeing the iWatch?

Bob Mansfield
What's the deal, Bob?

"Special projects" is either a robust, top-secret Apple division or a place where those who've served out their usefulness wait out retirement.

Let's assume it's the former, and that Bob Mansfield will now be working on something truly special...say, the iWatch?

Time to check your iWatch

Apple was short on other specifics, such as if Mansfield still plans on retiring after next year, if he's still SVP of Technologies or if someone else is taking over that position.

But let's focus on what we do know, however limited: Mansfield is said to have an interest in wearable tech, as cited by a New York Times' report from February. An Apple employee noted Mansfield has been "particularly interested in wearables," and is "engrossed by devices that connect to the iPhone, through Bluetooth, sharing information back and forth from the human body to the phone, including the Nike FuelBand and Jawbone Up."

Apple has reportedly hired a cadre of fitness and health experts for Team iWatch, and Mansfield himself is known to rock a FuelBand.

Mansfield is credited with overseeing some of the company's "most challenging engineering projects," in Cook's words, and his apparent interest in wearable, bio-minded tech places him almost perfectly heading or at least participating in the iWatch project.

Former Yves San Laurent CEO Paul Deneve was recently brought on board as a vice president to work on special projects, and Apple also picked up former Amazon CTO Kevin Lynch to work underneath Mansfield.

Nothing is clear yet, but perhaps Mansfield is the final piece to the iWatch dream team? Time will certainly tell.

Michelle Fitzsimmons

Michelle was previously a news editor at TechRadar, leading consumer tech news and reviews. Michelle is now a Content Strategist at Facebook.  A versatile, highly effective content writer and skilled editor with a keen eye for detail, Michelle is a collaborative problem solver and covered everything from smartwatches and microprocessors to VR and self-driving cars.