DARPA Announces Grand Challenge 2005 164
An anonymous reader writes "The Grand Challenge 2005 Date has been announced for October 8, 2005. Check out DARPA's official webpage for details. Already several teams from last year are gearing up: Carnegie Mellon Red Team, D.A.D., and Cal Tech. Also, several new teams are entering, among them Stanford, and Florida Tech. Should be a very interesting Challenge next year!"
We'll see... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:We'll see... (Score:3, Funny)
Surely we can't do any worse than this year's competitors, eh?
Re:We'll see... (Score:1)
Re:We'll see... (Score:2)
Re:We'll see... (Score:5, Insightful)
"Should be a very interesting Challenge next year!" ...more so if anyone finishes
More interesting for who? The crowd or the researchers? Hey, if you want an exciting race, go watch NASCAR (or not). As far as the researchers are concerned, it's probably more interesting when these things fail to finish the race than if they all completed the course without difficulty. Each failure teachs the researchers something about AI. These "lessons learned" are then used for a variety of applications and theoretical extensions, not just building a better autonomous car.
DARPA is not putting on these contests because they expect someone to win. They are trying to give researchers a difficult problem to work on. Don't be looking at the fact that none of the vehicles came close to finishing the race as some sort of failure or "boring". The problem is quite exciting for the researchers and for anyone interested in AI. The fact that they are making it an annual thing is icing on the cake.
GMD
Re:We'll see... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:We'll see... (Score:3, Insightful)
Hey, NASCAR races are more exciting when that happens too. People love to see stuff break.
Re:We'll see... [OT] (Score:2)
Re:We'll see... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Technology made it so you didn't lose more troops. The daisy cutters helped alter the battle field and prevent an outright slaughter. The tanks and FAE ensured a victory in the initital military campeign. what defeats the US is the p
More likely we won't... (Score:1)
Re:We'll see... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I have a winner (Score:2)
And man, that radio kill switch would be a real a bitch, huh?
Re:I have a winner (Score:2)
I disagree that industry has the solutions necessary to attack the offroad portion with any great ease. To a degree, industry is participating since many of the teams are using 4x4 vehicles. But having spent a lot of time driving offroad myself, I can tell y
we can only hope (Score:1, Interesting)
Based on the 'successes' of 2004... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Based on the 'successes' of 2004... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Based on the 'successes' of 2004... (Score:2)
Slow down. (Score:3, Funny)
Based on what I see every day on my commute, it would be a tough enough challenge to have a manned vehicle complete this task.
Maybe if you would get off your goddamn phone you wouldn't be swerving into my lane!!
what if... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:what if... (Score:2)
Re:what if... (Score:3, Funny)
The challenge isn't supposed to be impossible!
Re:what if... (Score:2)
That would be a practical appliation. You'ld just drive up and let yourself off at the mall entrance and let the car worry about finding a parking spot while you're shopping. Push a button on the fob and the car drives itself back up to the entrance and picks you up.
Do you like watching grass grow? (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:Do you like watching grass grow? (Score:2)
Seriously, I wish the participants luck, and I don't expect them to finish this year either. I live near the Mojave, and it's damned hard to off-road there even when you don't have obstacles and you do have a driver. So cut the guys/gals some slack.
Re:Do you like watching grass grow? (Score:2)
Yeah, let's help the military build Skynet (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Yeah, let's help the military build Skynet (Score:2)
But once built what would the world do with her?
Exactly (Score:2)
IEEE Spectrum article (Score:4, Informative)
I wish I had... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I wish I had... (Score:1)
a brief comment (Score:2, Insightful)
I still don't understand why they don't (Score:5, Funny)
Even better yet- a huge bumble ball with GPS locator to tell us where it is- just drop it into ANY terrain, and it will bounce around until it gets where it wants to be.
Re:I still don't understand why they don't (Score:3, Funny)
No no! You need to refer to that by its scientific name - simulated annealing [rubyforge.org]. There, now you can increase your billing rate by $50 an hour!
Re:I still don't understand why they don't (Score:4, Insightful)
And what will you do when this thing crashes at 60 mph into one of the barriers you haven't designed it to detect?
Collision avoidance without physical contact is one of the biggest challenges these teams face.
Also, the obstacles aren't necessarily these big, obvious concrete barriers dumped in the middle of the desert. How would your robot deal with encountering a lake, or coming to the edge of a cliff?
Re:I still don't understand why they don't (Score:4, Interesting)
Who's detecting anything? Go ahead and crash into the boulder or whatever- design the robot to bounce, use an accelerometer to detect the bounce. 60MPH bumpers aren't exactly impossible, you know.
Collision avoidance without physical contact is one of the biggest challenges these teams face.
Is that in the rules that they must have no physical contact? The website I saw deleted the rules for 2004 and hasn't posted the rules for 2005- but I can't imagine why they'd care if a combat-bot moving through enemy terroitory demolishes a few houses along the way, or crashes into them, detecting them as a barrier, and moves off in a different random direction.
Also, the obstacles aren't necessarily these big, obvious concrete barriers dumped in the middle of the desert. How would your robot deal with encountering a lake, or coming to the edge of a cliff?
Well, the lake was in the original, that's why you'd want the robot to be amphibious as well as reasonably indestructible. But I grant you the cliff- I guess it depends whether the cliff is on it's internal map of the area or not. Anyway, that's one way to detect the cliff and even find roads/bridges to cross a canyon. Another way to deal with it is with a range finder angled towards the ground- if it's suddenly WAY steeper in front of the robot than the robot was expecting, turn around and find another way.
Or, alternatively, as long as you're making your electric-drive, 60MPH, invertable robot's body out of black-box strength steel to begin with, don't worry about the cliffs. A drop of a mile or so won't hurt it, and it will find it's way out of the canyon eventually.....
Re:I still don't understand why they don't (Score:2, Insightful)
Speaking as a former off-road enthusiast, unless that range-finder is suspended a couple hundred feet in front of your vehicle, it's not going to do you any good if you're moving at 60mph. Stopping on natural surfaces can often take a lot more distance than you're used to, especially if there's a downgrade involved.
Re:I still don't understand why they don't (Score:2)
OTOH- you've got a point with the speed, and there's also a rule I missed abo
Re:I still don't understand why they don't (Score:2)
That seems to be the real solution- having a scout ahead, say a small microcopter, feeding information back to the vehicle.
As for building it to "ridiculous strength", yes you can. But remember that the stiffer/heavier it is, the more shock it will take on every bump. Welds can break under those kind of conditions. Personally, I'd build it to be light, smal
Re:I still don't understand why they don't (Score:2)
The interesting question is exactly what are they planning on using this technology for if it ever works. All I recall is Congress passed a bill, and made some money available for the military with a mandate to move some of its vehicles to autonomous robots. Is that a scout vehicle, a combat vehicle, a cargo carrier or some of each.
One of the Army's obvious bigger problems in Iraq is moving supplies without getting people in the convoy
Re:I still don't understand why they don't (Score:2)
Re:I still don't understand why they don't (Score:2)
Re:I still don't understand why they don't (Score:2)
Re:I still don't understand why they don't (Score:2)
Re:I still don't understand why they don't (Score:1, Funny)
While they're at it, why don't they make it out of the same stuff that they make the plane's black box out of??!
Re:I still don't understand why they don't (Score:2)
Exactly. The problem with the approaches to the Grand Challenge so far is that they're relying WAY too much on the AI- when what they should be doing is improving the construction of the original vehicle to the point that the AI can be very, very, very stupid- basically just a homing beacon seeker using an internal map to stick to roads as much as possible and GPS navigation. The "beacon" can
Re:I still don't understand why they don't (Score:2)
Re:I still don't understand why they don't (Score:2)
Re:I still don't understand why they don't (Score:2)
Re:I still don't understand why they don't (Score:2)
Re:I still don't understand why they don't (Score:2)
Prize increased to $2M (Score:4, Interesting)
In the first DARPA Grand Challenge, held on a desert route from California to Nevada, 15 teams from a field of 106 applicants progressed to the final event
Why increase the prize to $2M? If the goal of the challenge is to develop an autonomous vehicle, why not use the extra $1M as a grant to fund the top 15 teams from the last challenge.
Re:Prize increased to $2M (Score:2, Insightful)
because it would be unfair to newcomers to the competition.
OTOH, what top 15 teams? There was a TOTAL [imagiverse.org] of 15 teams qualified!!!
Re:Prize increased to $2M (Score:1)
Because $66,666 is squat.
Re:Prize increased to $2M (Score:2)
An extra $1M in winnings increases the amount invested by several million, so it is better spent as part of the carrot, rather than the fuel.
-Adam
Florida Tech? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Florida Tech? (Score:1)
Re:Florida Tech? (Score:1)
Re:Florida Tech? (Score:1)
I don't know if Florida Tech is competing in it, but I know that the University of Florida did; a friend of mine was on the team.
Their website is here. [ufl.edu]
Dupe? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Dupe? (Score:2, Funny)
Nitpicks (Score:4, Interesting)
Are non-American citizens allowed to participate? I tried looking at the Rules Page [grandchallenge.org] but it's not up yet. I don't recall if there was a stipulation which restricted participants to American citizens.
Given DARPA's great R&D track record in the past (Internet and what not), I would've liked to participate in the contest *purely* from a scientific curiousity point of view - and I bet a lot of nerds all over the world would like to overlook the fact that the contest is sponsored by a military agency (prize not withstanding - since it's US taxpayer money). Just as long as DARPA lives up to it's name and does not morph into OARPA - it's happened way too many times in the past.
Incidentally, the link to the official page [darpa.mil] is incorrect on that page. The site linked to in the article seems to be just a mirror of the darpa.mil site, however.
Should be good (Score:5, Funny)
I can't wait to see all the new automated field medic designs. Wait, why does that one have a big gun sticking out of the top....
Re:Should be good (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Should be good (Score:1)
Re:Should be good (Score:3, Funny)
We had to destroy their lives in order to save them.
I should hope so (Score:2)
What is your evidence for this? This year, everyone looked promising but failed at the first hurdle. Nobody even got to the halfway point, and the whole thing was badly presented to the public as well. Anyway, lets hope things go better next year
Human-less warfare? (Score:1)
Re:Human-less warfare? (Score:2)
your local grocer!
Read My Past Posting (Score:1)
Read this older post. [slashdot.org] I think it speaks for itself. One wonders how many teams they will let in this time around? Or, is this going to be the same-old same-old [earthlink.net]?
Here's a headstart... (Score:2)
Oct 8, 2005?? (Score:2)
SATURDAY SATURDAY SATURDAY!!
just doesn't sound right [tradedforwheat.com].
Change that damn date (Score:1, Offtopic)
wheels vs legs (Score:3, Interesting)
Thats what Id try anyway. I'd fail miserably, but wouldnt building a mechanical cheetah b e lots of fun.
Robot == Walking MINI Cooper Transformer (Score:1)
Range rover? (Score:2)
And another thing, stop putting a damn space in Caltech. Its 1 word when written like that.
Don't forget Cornell (Score:1)
Team Overbot will be participating (Score:1, Redundant)
We need a few good volunteers in Silicon Valley. No pay, some risk, long hours, we cover all the expenses. We're close to a working vehicle, as can be seen from the pictures on our web site.
Carmack (Score:2)
Re:Carmack (Score:2)
Hold challenge more often? (Score:1)
The government owns the land, right - so no cost there. These guys are funding themselves because the result of being successful will be to get recogniztion (and $$) from DARPA.
Why not do it more often?
Lessons Learned (Score:5, Interesting)
First off, returning teams already have a foundation to build upon, both in existing hardware and in technical experience. Writing software for a race like this is almost impossible to do without testing it on a working vehicle (i.e. testing in simulation only works out major problems, but does not translate well to desert racing). For example, Caltech spent 6 months getting actuators and drivers to work well enough to hand over the vehicle to the software team. As soon as that happened, we noticed several problems interfacing the actuators to the software (e.g. updating actuator positions too fast locked them up and made them stop responding). Ultimately our vehicle was not even waypoint following accurately until late February. Most teams were in the same state we were in - racing the clock, plagued by bad hardware (sensors and actuators) and inexperience. BUT we were very close to being very good. If they re-ran the race mid-summer this year the results from all of the teams would be very different. Looking to next year, teams have working vehicles which means 1 full year of onsite testing instead of 2 months.
Another thing that is interesting about the next race is the timing relative to academic calendars. A lot of teams are university driven and it was very difficult for students to devote enough time to the project while still handling their school requirements (definitely true with a Caltech workload). The next race is at the very end of the summer which means that a crew can work on the vehicle full time for three months before the next race.
Whether or not someone wins the next race is entirely up to DARPA. By next year there will be 5+ teams that could navegate last-race's course in
Anyway, good luck to all teams...especially new teams - you have quite a hurdle in front of you. See you in 1 year.
Re:Lessons Learned (Score:2)
No. Funny moderations do not count towards karma scores.
On the other hand, some people browse with a higher-than-zero (or -1) threshold, so I suppose in that case they might overlook the grandparent initially. However, as I post this the grandparent is now rated at +4 Interesting so maybe you just caught it early.
Incompetence or security? (Score:2)
Is it incompetence on the part of the creator of that page or is it because I'm surfing from outside the USA and DARPA figure it's not a good idea for potential terrorists to see what's going on with this challenge?
One of the past participants is described as (Score:2)
And the winners receive... (Score:2)
If you have something to say. . . (Score:2)
WTF. . . (Score:2)
I don't pattern my thinking after television programs and movies.
As a result, I am able to write sentences which people can understand. Dude.
-FL
Sources and answers. (Score:2)
Here's an article [americanfreepress.net] with numerous details. Further reading on your own will enable you to make a reasonably accurate measure as to Tin-Foil-Hat quotient on this bit of 'raving'.
As for arguments, I'm not even sure what the actual subject matter you're writing about even is.
The subject matter is the DARPA challenge. My general position is that participation in the DARPA challenge is tantamount
My entry (Score:2)
Re:DARPA. Aren't they... (Score:5, Insightful)
the same spooks that want to identify terrorists by how they walk?
No, they're the ones who created the Internet. You know, that thing you're using right now. Plus, they happen to be a huge supporter of scientific research and development. Given the fact that industry has slashed R&D in favor of raising the quarterly reports by a half a percentage point or giving the members of the Board an ivory backscratcher as an annual bonus, let's not be too quick to insult one of the few remaining patrons of science.
GMD
Re:DARPA. Aren't they... (Score:2)
An obscure Simpson's reference in a
Re:DARPA. Aren't they... (Score:2)
Indeed. While it is to some people, a challenge to work for the government/military, it is Never to be viewed in the case of you, the potential worker or in this case *Researcher* not knowing what you get when you go into the job or *Experiment*.
From the Darpa Grand Challenge Website [grandchallenge.org]
DARPA is the central research and development organization f
DARPA-hard problems (Score:3, Insightful)
DARPA is the central research and development organization for the Department of Defense (DoD). The Agency manages and directs basic and applied research and development projects for DoD, and pursues research and technology where the risk and payoff are both very high and where success may provide dramatic advances for traditional military roles and missions.(emphasis mine)
This mission statement is important because it emphasizes that DARPA was specifically designed to fund research into hard problems. I
Re:DARPA-hard problems (Score:3, Insightful)
Autonomous vehicles would be very useful for the private sector as well as for the military. In fact there already exists agricultural vehicles that are able to drive themselves. These don't have obstacle avoidance, but merely follow GPS coordinates. They do travel relatively fast (~ 20 mph) and can steer the vehicle more accurately than a human operator could.
Re:Grand Challenge a great exp. for college studen (Score:2)
Are you using an A* algorithm or something else?
Mod parent down (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Grand Challenge a great exp. for college studen (Score:2, Informative)
Mod parent down.
Re:Grand Challenge a great exp. for college studen (Score:1)
Mod parent down.
Re:Grand Challenge a great exp. for college studen (Score:2)
As usual, I offer a $250 award for information regarding the identity of the person responsible. We can be reached at (650) 326-3529.