DARPA Grand Challenge Teams Submit Videos to DARPA 93
doughnuthole writes "The deadline for DARPA Grand Challenge teams to submit their videos to DARPA just passed and some have posted them online. Some of the teams with these videos posted are Team Caltech, Axion Racing, Virginia Tech (on the Media page), Insight Racing, and UMass Dartmouth. The Grand Challenge is a 175 mile race run by fully autonomous vehicles. Since no teams completed the 2004 race, DARPA decided to run it again, this time for $2 million."
Last Year was appalling... (Score:4, Informative)
Let's hope the extra money makes the difference this year.
Re:Last Year was appalling... (Score:5, Insightful)
Most teams are not in it for the money, but for the sake of science and engineering. Some teams will spend close to that amount before all is said and done.
Re:Last Year was appalling... (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Last Year was appalling... (Score:1, Interesting)
I had hopes for the DAD team. They have a simple and robust sensor suite.
Their problem was they had to halt their vehicle to allow the officials to tow one of the challengers out of the way. And when they restarted, their front wheel was stuck on a rock. Their software wasn't smart enough to gun it and get over that small obstacle. Must have been frustrating not to be able to kick that damn rock out of the way. Up to then they were looking good.
Re:Last Year was appalling... (Score:3, Funny)
Or smart enough (Score:1)
Just Great (Score:1)
Seriously, I've put a good deal of thought into this, and it should be fairly simple to engineer a system that would drive your car during times that it would be appropriate to use a cruse control.
Re:Just Great (Score:2)
Re:Just Great (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Just Great (Score:2)
like I said, considerable thought.
Re:Just Great (Score:2)
Detect lane edges? How? You can't assume special equipment in the road to tell you, it doesn't exist yet (and could fail if it did). Look for patches of white lines
Re:Just Great (Score:2)
Let's look at how us human types drive. We basically determine what is road and non-road. More specifically, what is our lane and what is not-our lane. We keep our speed at the speed limit (in theory). We don't hit anything directl
Re:Just Great (Score:1, Informative)
What DARPA wants is a combat-ready system that can drive cross-country with little or no outside help.
Different problems, and they require different solutions, and a
Re:Just Great (Score:5, Funny)
Different problems, and they require different solutions, and a system that could pass the DARPA test would be overkill and unsuitable for the daily commute to work.
I suppose that depends on what one considers a combat zone; dealing with "drivers" who are busy eating a bagel, reading the paper, drinking coffee, talking on a cell phone, shaving, and putting on makeup might require a combat-ready system.
Re:Just Great (Score:1, Informative)
The other issue is what to do about oder cars not so equipped. In addition to the road and car t
Liability law stops this dead. (Score:2)
not going to be taking any leaps. The auto makers
had enough trouble with anti-lock breaks.
Thank the lawyers in congress and the trial lawyer
association for this.
Re:Liability law stops this dead. (Score:1)
I dunno (Score:4, Insightful)
What exactly is the point? (Score:1, Funny)
I think that the government is secretly trying to create an army of autonomous pizza delivery drones. So long as you live in the desert, one of these few complex machines crafted by some of the world's best and brightest might get you your pizza within 30 minutes or less.
Re:What exactly is the point? (Score:2)
planning the roll-out of a chain of Pizza Huts
in Iraq! No doubt that Halliburton will bill the
US government high enough delivery charges to
make up for the occassional road-side IED
(Improvised Explosive Device) and missed delivery
deadlines (free pizza with your next order).
This does not bode well for a timely exit from
Iraq (but of course we all suspected that anyway).
Re:What exactly is the point? (Score:2)
Re:What exactly is the point? (Score:3, Interesting)
Autonomous dump trucks with carrying capacities of 100+ tonnes of ore have been in use in open pit mining operations for several years now. At the moment, it's complex and expensive to set up the control systems for them. More intelligent operation with lower start-up costs will definitely interest the big mining companies.
Re:What exactly is the point? (Score:1)
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Lets hope the *software* is better! (Score:4, Interesting)
Hardware, especially sensors and their positioning, matter far more than people think.
Re:Lets hope the *software* is better! (Score:3, Funny)
I'm guessing what they really need is physics processing unit(s) [slashdot.org] with player/missle graphics.
Re:Lets hope the *software* is better! (Score:1)
Would you look at that thing! (Score:5, Funny)
Team Aggie Spirit Video (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.stackworks.net/TASVCD.mpg [stackworks.net]
It takes an amazing amount of work to get to even this stage, but we're making very fast progress.
We're a new, entirely student run team with a very limited budget, and always looking for sponsors. If you know anyone who can provide money, equipment, supplies or other assitance, let us know!
Re:Team Aggie Spirit Video (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Team Aggie Spirit Video (Score:2)
How about a gigantic Roomba? (Score:4, Funny)
I hope a team enters with a very large metal hollow sphere with gear teethmarks lining the inside and the machinery be a shaft, gyroscope and gears on both ends of unequal weight. The rest of the contents can be fuel/energy cells to power the rotating motion of the machinery inside -- it essentially just has to "throw" itself in a direction and keep rolling and steering. Travelling 175 miles ought to be possible as long as the terrain isn't ridiculous.
Re:How about a gigantic Roomba? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:How about a gigantic Roomba? (Score:1)
Re:How about a gigantic Roomba? (Score:1)
Great minds think alike, or fools rarely differ. The Rotundus guys are on to something!
Re:How about a gigantic Roomba? (Score:2)
Get them to chase each other (Score:5, Funny)
A load of drone cars should be driven behind these competitors with models of druglords with machine guns, outlaws, corrupt police officers, and people to whom the teams own money.
That way, they should be able to defy gravity enough to land from a great height at a mere 30 degrees to the horizontal without breaking their suspension or driveshafts, and continue to turn even after front side collisions which would leave bushes and pinions bent (or wheels set to cambers which would normally cause them to no longer turn). They might even get speed boosts beyond the maximum engineering speed expected for the motor, gas and gearbox actually installed.
For an added bonus, they could have critically wounded people in the back, and an accomplice who absolutely has to jump out at 40mph somewhere mid course in order to continue some secret mission.
How do you kill people with a robot car? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:How do you kill people with a robot car? (Score:1)
Re:How do you kill people with a robot car? (Score:1)
Re:How do you kill people with a robot car? (Score:3, Informative)
It's simple: if a soldier isn't behind the wheel of a supply truck, then he can be out shooting at insurgents. Another issue is that the long supply lines of the U.S. army are currently one of its weak points- Jessica Lynch was part of a supply convoy, for instance. Taking the soldiers off the trucks probably doesn't make the supplies safer but it could reduce the number of casualties. Further on down the line, the military will probably be fielding robots
Re:How do you kill people with a robot car? (Score:3, Informative)
Supply convoys. Do you remember that story from last year [nwsource.com] where troops refused to go on a supply mission because it was too dangerous? From DARPA's 2004 FAQ [darpa.mil]:
Q: How will autonomous ground vehicle technology benefit the military?
A: The military is looking toward a future in which manned and unmanned systems work together on the ground and in the air to provide enhanced capabilities for U.S. forces. For an example of the utility of unmanned ground systems,
Re:How do you kill people with a robot car? (Score:3, Interesting)
We can't stop here, this is bat country! (Score:1, Funny)
Cornell (Score:3, Informative)
http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/041216/sfth012_1.ht
http://www.cornellsun.com/vnews/display.v/ART/
http://www.cornellsun.com/v
http://www.automotive.com/n
Feel free to Google us and come visit our site.
Two entries from "red team racing" (Score:1)
Re:Two entries from "red team racing" (Score:3, Informative)
Here's the link to CMU. [redteamracing.org]
Re:Cornell (Score:1)
Far above Cayuga's waters
With its waves of blue
Stands our noble alma mater
Glorious to view
Lift the chorus, speed it onward
Loud her praises tell
Hail to thee, our alma mater
Hail, all hail, Cornell
Far above the busy humming
Of the bustling town
Reared against the arch of heaven
Looks she proudly down
Lift the chorus, speed it onward
Loud her praises tell
Hail to thee, our alma mater
Hail, all hail, Cornell
What a joke. (Score:1)
Torrents for all Video Files (Score:1)
Red Team Returns (Score:1, Troll)
5% of the student body participated at Caltech ... (Score:3, Interesting)
Team Overbot video is on line (Score:4, Insightful)
One of our biggest problems in Silicon Valley has been finding a big open space in which to test. We now have access to a huge parking lot built during the dot-com boom, adjacent to an unfinished building complex. So we have the Overbot winding in and out among the parking islands. We'll be testing there today in a few hours.
In terms of technology, Team DAD [digitalautodrive.com] probably is most innnovative. Everything runs on digital signal processors. They're building their own laser rangefinder this year. Last year, they got further than anybody else without wrecking. (CMU crashed three times; their HUMMV was able to survive the first two.)
Nobody seems to have a breakthrough in sensing. (By this I mean sensing good enough to evaluate terrain. Detecting big, solid obstacles is trivial.) LIDAR line scanners are too limited, stereo vision doesn't register well on dirt, and strong intelligent vision processing requires a breakthrough that twenty years of research has failed to produce. The breakthrough needed is flash LIDAR, which exists, but wasn't ready soon enough for this year's Grand Challenge. (The rules prohibit the use of Government-funded patented technology not available for general sale by last August, and the good flash LIDAR wasn't available in time.) CMU has a LIDAR line scanner on a giant gimbal, and we have a LIDAR line scanner on an overly large tilt head, but that's an interim solution and a technical dead end.
On the other hand, GPS and inertial gear gets better and cheaper every year. It's surprising how good it is.
This year, everybody who makes it to the starting line should disappear over the horizon at the start. The minimal level of performance to make it through the "site visit" hurdle is above that demonstrated by most of the vehicles entered last year.
And this year, DARPA is putting tank traps on the course.
Any programmers in the LA area? (Score:2)
We are currently seeking additional team members with the following skills and/or resources:
* Sensor integration
* DSP programming
* Gumstix hardware/programming
* Autonomy/AI - CYC/DAML or other ontology-based programming experience
* Game engine programming (for robotic simulation)
* Desert racing/driving experi
Re:Any programmers in the LA area? (Score:1)
Ripsaw (Score:3, Informative)
People fall for this stuff.... (Score:1)
It's too bad they don't have ANY integrity, and it's worse that
Andy Out!
UBC Team Thunderbird (Score:1)
I am Steve Jones of UBC Team Thunderbird. We are a Canadian team based out of the University of British Columbia. We have a very clear plan for how we are going to use Fuzzy Logic to deal with the unique challenges of this vehicle and are very actively implementing those plans at this time. We have been making an incredible amount of progress over the past few weeks as we have moved into the full implementation stage after a lot of planning. We are already well beyond what is visible in the Discover
Team Axion looking for developers (Score:1)
Hope to see you at the race!
Another team's video A Tale of Fire (Score:1)
They have an amusing write up of theirs trials and tribulations (and electrical fires) in getting their video ready. http://ssinc.us/TooSimple.htm [ssinc.us]
Maybe they should be called Team Murphy's Law
KD