DARPA Grand Challenge Finalists Announced 129
Xerotope writes "DARPA announced today the 23 finalists[pdf warning] of the DARPA Grand Challenge at the closing ceremonies of the National Qualifying Event. Carnegie Mellon University's Red Team will start on Saturday with the first and third positions, with 'H1ghlander' taking the pole position and 'Sandstorm' following 10 minutes later. Stanford's 'Stanley' will start second. Of the 43 semi-finalists, 23 robots managed to finish the 2.2 mile course at least once. 5 robots (Stanford, Red Team, Red Team Too, Axion Racing, and Team Teramax) completed all of their runs. CMU's 'H1ghlander' and 'Sandstorm' finished the four runs with an average time of 10 minutes, 20 seconds each. Stanford's Stanley average time was 10:43."
Now just slap a cyberthalamus in (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Now just slap a cyberthalamus in (Score:1)
Ob. Homer Simspon Metal Man quote - "Platinum... mmmMMMMmmmm"
Terminator or Explorer? (Score:4, Insightful)
Let's hope this technology will be used to advance our understanding of our planet and the universe.
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2, Funny)
"How long until the UN and EU assert control over all of these inventions...and expect the United States to manufacture them for free, under the banner of human rights?"
That's what I wonder...
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:1)
This is DARPA (Score:1)
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2)
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2)
Note: BERSERKER [berserker.com] is a registered trademark of Fred Saberhagen and can not be used without permission.
The bombs will drive themselves (Score:2)
Trouble is, once this technology becomes widespread, the bombs aren't going to be just roadside, they'll be driving themselves right up to you. Imagine the damage a swarm of autonomous vehicles could d
Autonomous Bombs (Score:2)
Seriously though, I suspect that if autonomous bombs come about, landmines will come back in style.
Re:Autonomous Bombs (Score:2)
Obviously, you've been living in a cave for the past, oh, 200 years, to not have noticed that when man (specifically Western Man, which now encompasses Japan, South Korea, Taiwan & soon India) puts his mind to technology, it invariably gets faster, better & all around more capable.
Seriously though, I suspect that if autono
Autonomous Bombs (alt) (Score:2)
Personally, I'm curious as to whether, by the time that level of technological excellence comes along, it won't be decided that humans are much cheaper to put in than the robots. There was a sci-fi story along those line
:Autonomous Bombs (alt) [fixed] (Score:2)
Personally, I'm curious as to whether, by the time that level of technological excellence comes along, it won't be decided that humans are much cheaper to put in than the robots. There was a sci-fi story along those line
Re::Autonomous Bombs (alt) [fixed] (Score:2)
Back in the day, Werner von Braun is alleged to have said
Re:Autonomous Bombs (Score:2)
Comment out a few lines of code and it won't.
Robots have no innate self preservation. If you tell them to drive straight into a wall or off a cliff they will do so. Anything that they stop for is merely what the programmers decide warrants it.
Yes, that makes them pretty dangerous in a war zone. I work with robotics all the time, and I would not get anywhere near a grand challenge entry when they are autonomous.
Re:The bombs will drive themselves (Score:1)
Ok, so will our counter-autonomous vehicles be called Autobots or Decepticons?
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:3, Insightful)
No.
A majority of U.S. casualties are due to road side bombs.
The majority of deaths in Iraq is no that of U.S. forces, however.
Maybe the technology will save soldier's lives, but it will mostly free up soldier's time to go shoot at those people you don't even count as "lives".
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2)
<\america_is_evil>
Next time you reply, can you at least bookend your post with <vagina> tags?
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2)
You were replying to:
With an attempt to pass off this military technology as a lifesav
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2)
And its not due to US forces killing them either. It's Iraq's "free" army blowing up its own civilians. How will a robotic convoy make that worse again?
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2, Insightful)
Manhattan project scientist: "but we never thought they'd use it..."
Funking dipsticks.
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:1)
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:3, Insightful)
Combine it with a rental system, for instance -- and have it meet you at your doorstep and drive you to your destination. And then drive itself back to to wherever it next needs to be.
One could also see it being useful for the elderly -- those with poor eyesight or reflexes, and who don't want to have to depend on somebody else to drive them. Ditto for others not able to drive themselves. Maybe you won't need designated drivers anymore.
Theoretically, a
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:3, Funny)
I can see a movie around the idea of someone reprogramming people's cars (yay bluetooth hacks!) to deliver their children to a sweatshop: it's got everything, fear of technology, the opportunity for some wicked robot car chase scenes
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2)
'course, I grew up in a more traditional nuclear family with one parent as wage earner and the other taking care of the kids. Maybe more modern kids would be fine with it, or even think of it as cool.
We can't even imagine the uses this will be put to (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:We can't even imagine the uses this will be put (Score:3, Funny)
>
Yes, but how will this apply to porn?
Everyone knows porn drives all new technology.
well RTFP!! (Score:2)
Sounds like bukkake, if you ask me!
Re:We can't even imagine the uses this will be put (Score:2)
Hands-free driving.
Re:We can't even imagine the uses this will be put (Score:1)
Girlfriend.
KFG
Re:We can't even imagine the uses this will be put (Score:1)
Re:We can't even imagine the uses this will be put (Score:2)
So they question is, do jihadi robots get 99 virgin nerds to repair them in heaven?
Re:We can't even imagine the uses this will be put (Score:2)
-1, Redundant
Re:We can't even imagine the uses this will be put (Score:2)
Re:We can't even imagine the uses this will be put (Score:1)
Re:We can't even imagine the uses this will be put (Score:2)
The price barrier will be of short duration. I expect that in a surprisingly short period of time, it'll be down to a few thousand dollars for the guidance computer and sensors. The major portion of the cost will be the vehicle itself, and they've shown themselves to be more than willing to front that (or steal them). They don't seem to be short of cash in any case. All the
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2, Funny)
Wait a second. "Gentile"? Like, as in, non-Jewish?
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:5, Insightful)
This phase is intentionally designed for developing unmanned transport vehicles for use in low/no traffic, rugged areas. Think resupply and medivac. That alone would vastly reduce support overhead and threat to support troops (who generally aren't wandering around in heavily armored vehicles like front line troops).
It's not designed for use as a weapons platform (there is no ability to determine threats or potential targets), nor for usage on other planets -- all of the vehicles make use of GPS to some degree (they can operate without, but are handicapped) and we don't exactly have constellations of sats flying around any other stellar bodies.
The military isn't particularly interested in completely autonomous weapon systems -- it's too damn dangerous to your own people. The last thing you need is an autonomous anti-tank or anti-infantry mis-identifying your own (or your allies) weapons/troops as targets and eliminating them. We have enough friendly fire problems with humans at the controls -- and robots are far, far behind humans when it comes to properly identifying things.
There's plenty of civilian uses too -- another reply already mentioned a good number of them.
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, that sounds good, in theory. Now I admittedly don't know what sort of AI or algorithms these autonomous vehicles are using to navigate and make "decisions", but if you've got an unmann
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2)
You're thinking wrong, simply because what's in these supply vehicles isn't an interesting target, at least not in our current theaters of operations. You probably wouldn't want to have them transport ammo (although, really, if you just transported bullets and clips w/o guns then they'd be useless -- the insurgents use AK-47s by and large, which use drastically different ammo from M16s), but transporting food, water, fuel, mail, medical supp
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2)
the insurgents use AK-47s by and large, which use drastically different ammo from M16s
True, but that is because of the availability of AK47s and the ammo for them, not because nasty terrorist hands are burned by the righteous grips of the M-16. In the very worst case ammo makes a handy ingredient in jury rigged bombs.
And very little of that is desirous to an insurgent, who generally doesn't think in terms of cutting off a supply train.
Yes, those terrorists are so damn stupid they don'
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2, Interesting)
Yes, because I implied that. Note that I said that you wouldn't want to ship the guns as well.
And yes, you could use the ammo in jury rigged bombs... but there's not much in a casing, or even a clip. It's a horrendously inefficient way to make an explosive. There are household chemicals you can combine to have far more explosive power in far less space.
The stuff you don't want them getting are the bombs, artillary shells, tank shells
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2)
Except that we just established that mechanized convoys would be much easier to stop, because they don't have human drivers and don't have armed escorts. And, of course, stopping a convoy not only means more supplies for you, it means less for your enemy. And you're drastically over-estimating the res
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2)
Well actually they are pretty much useless. Few people know how to maintain an M-16 in battlefield conditions, so most of them would foul quickly. Go look at Vietnam to see that happening to US troops when they were first introduced. The AK-47 is heavier, less accurate, and w
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2)
The essential problem is not "Why would you want to stop an autonomous vehicle?" (I can think of plenty of reasons why people *would* want to stop them no matter what they're carrying, and yet not be 'insurgents'). It's "What does the vehicle do if it's stopped, and how does this impact it's mission?".
Not thinking these things through leads to a typical failure of imagination that g
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2)
I sure as hell wouldn't get near this vehicle [terramax.com] if I knew there was no intelligent human driver in it.
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2)
So what happens once the vehicle is coralled? And how do
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2)
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2)
You're assuming an autmoated convoy would not be gaurded by real people. I could see a use for this in freeing up guys that drive the straight supply tr
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2)
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2)
Thing is, these autonomous vehicles will probably be transmitting video and position data back to base in realtime. If something like that happened, they could probably just send in a fast-response team or track the abductors' vehicles via satellite. A short while later, you have N fewer potential abductors.
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2, Interesting)
Not yet anyway: Red Planet Wayfinder: A GPS System for Mars [space.com]. Don't think these guys (meaning the current US administration) aren't going to weaponize everything they can get the
Mis-Identification of Enemy Targets (Score:2)
A humanoid machine is holding a massive battle rifle. It looks like a CHROME SKELETON... a high-tech Death figure. It is the endoskeleton of a Series 800 Terminator. Its glowing red eyes compassionlessly swe
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:2, Funny)
Actually, I think most uses will be for gentile purposes; unless the Israeli's get involved.
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:3, Funny)
Jews want to put robots into space?
Re:Terminator or Explorer? (Score:1)
But they have a habit of taking technology developed for one purpose and integrating that technology with weaponry. The Predator/Hellfire combo is a good example.
Moon Exploration would be Ideal for thisTechnology (Score:2)
Equipped with a full array of IMAX, video and picture cameras (w/mult. backups,) it would photograph and transmit Moon exploration data in real-time. Control it by remote, and have it run on solar energy. You would basically just get it on the Moon and then drive the thing until it completely fails or malfun
Ghost Rider (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Ghost Rider (Score:2, Interesting)
While I had hoped that it would make it, those hopes weren't very high. Using a two wheeeled vehicle instead of a four wheel vehicle just adds needless compilications to the whole thing. A four (or three) wheeled vehicle can stop where it is while it tries to determine terrain etc. A two wheeled vehicle has to keep moving. If it wants to go backwards, it has to circle around.
Even though they didn't make it, hats off to 'em.
Re:Ghost Rider (Score:2)
http://cs.stanford.edu/group/roadrunner/video/NQE- Day-Three.wmv [stanford.edu]
The motorcycle runs into a fence and falls over, then manages to right itself and keep going pushing through the fence. That's pretty damn amazing.
Go ENSCO! (Score:2, Informative)
www.teamensco.com
well if the summary isn't going to explain it... (Score:5, Informative)
"The DARPA Grand Challenge is an unprecedented government effort to accelerate research and development in autonomous ground vehicles to help save American lives on the battlefield. DARPA will award $2 million to the autonomous (robotic) ground vehicle that can successfully navigate a challenging desert course of approximately 150 miles the fastest (in less than 10 hours). The vehicles must find and follow a prescribed course route, avoid obstacles, and negotiate turns, all while travelling at militarily-relevant rates of speed. The ground vehicles are fully autonomous - not remote-controlled."
Re:well if the summary isn't going to explain it.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Otherwise, it won't be a war. It will be a masacre.
Re:well if the summary isn't going to explain it.. (Score:2)
Re:well if the summary isn't going to explain it.. (Score:2)
One of the most reliable ways to prevent a war is to thoroughly convince an enemy that they have no chance whatsoever, and that they're better off -not- fighting. That should appeal to humanitarians.
Re:well if the summary isn't going to explain it.. (Score:2)
Us humanitarians just love the sound of that.
Re:well if the summary isn't going to explain it.. (Score:1)
Re:well if the summary isn't going to explain it.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Because, of course, it doesn't matter if they burn your house and steal your property; you're not supposed to value your property over their life. Gosh, they might even be mentally ill and therefore i
Re:well if the summary isn't going to explain it.. (Score:2)
Cue replies about US "imperialism", noting the irony that if the US was actually interested in an empire, no one would be permitted to complain about it.
War Philosophy (Score:2)
Re:well if the summary isn't going to explain it.. (Score:1)
No - they don't, and they shouldn't. Their job is to equip their forces with the best tools to win the fight. Giving the other side access to the same tools would be self-defeating, no?
Re:well if the summary isn't going to explain it.. (Score:2)
Well, duh (Score:2)
Seriously. Don't you WANT to be on the side that has the technological advantage? During war, I sure as hell do. I want every single advantage possible because war is war. It's not some polite disagreement between parties. What's the old saying, "All is fair in love and war"?
Re:Well, duh (Score:2)
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20051006/ap_on_go_pr_wh
"The militants believe that controlling one country will rally the Muslim masses, enabling them to overthrow all moderate governments in the region, and establish a radical Islamic empire that spans from Spain to Indonesia."
Oh yes! The evil islamists! Let's crush them with our invinc
Re:well if the summary isn't going to explain it.. (Score:2)
Re:well if the summary isn't going to explain it.. (Score:2)
This year the qualifications were more difficult, including a tunnel shielded with metal which was designed to test the ability to drive through a tunnel
progress on the cheap (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:progress on the cheap (Score:2)
I'm sure the 2 million dollar prize doesn't have anything to do with it
Fair elimination (Score:2)
Re:Fair elimination (Score:2)
DARPA Announces 2005 Grand Challenge Semifinalists [slashdot.org]
DARPA announced 40 semifinalists for the 2005 Grand Challenge autonomous robot race today. Notable remaining teams include the Carnegie Mellon University Red Team, Stanford Racing and a high school team, the Palos Verde Road Warriors. 78 te
Still too slow (Score:3, Insightful)
Don't get me wrong I'm very impressed with the results so far but it might just not be enough. Here's to hoping that they can make up some time elsewhere.
Re:Still too slow (Score:2)
Re:Still too slow (Score:4, Informative)
At the qualifications, there were mandatory speed limits imposed in most (if not all) the areas. In the RDDF file, there are the GPS coordinates and a speed limit number. For example, the straight away was 40mph while some of the obstacle strewn areas was 5 mph. The vehicles are capable of going faster and in fact a couple vehicles maxed out the 40 mph on the straight away.
DARPA officials at the media press conference on Wednesday said that if they stick to the race speed limits, then they will finish in about 6 1/2 to 7 hours. In the real race, there are hard speed limits and then there are suggested limits (which a team can break). The suggested speed limits are in low obstacle areas, but are suggeseted so that the chase vehicle doesn't lose sight of the robot. Remember that this race is being held in the desert, so the dust kicked up could obscure it from view.
Quirky fact, the BLM (Bureau of Land Management) mandates 25 mph or less in desert tortoise areas. You gotta love beauracracy.
Some of this is explained in my article on tgdaily.com
http://www.tgdaily.com/2005/10/06/darpa2005_featu
Re:Still too slow (Score:2, Interesting)
(If I ran things, that max speed would be more like 5 mph. But then I'm a Joshua tree-hugger.)
Re:Still too slow (Score:2, Interesting)
Highlander's record time was only 7 seconds slower than the "course ideal" that you could expect to get if you went exactly the speed limit all the way around. In fact, we were scolded by DARPA fo
Re:Still too slow (Score:3, Informative)
At least three of the vehicles that qualified for the race have performed 170 mile runs at race-success pace on mixed road/off-road courses that should simulate race conditions very close
In other news... (Score:3, Funny)
CMU... (Score:2)
Hmmm... (Score:2, Funny)
EU, UN to Wrestle Internet Control From US
Google Declares War on Microsoft
...is it just me, or are
Woohoo (Score:3, Funny)
Anyone else going? (Score:1)
They are going to have grandstands, video monitors at various locations to show passing vehicles and when a vehicle finishes or is DQ'ed it will come back to the grandstands where you can check it out.
Grand Challenge team funding (Score:2)
What's really making this go is not new technology, but money. Most of the designs are quite straightforward. But nobody in the US has ever spent money at this rate in robotics research. CMU spent $3 million last year, and this year the total costs of their efforts were much higher. The major teams have direct engineering support, including on-site people, from major auto and aerospace companies. Huge field test and support operations ha
Live tracking on the web tomorrow (Score:1)
More information and Video coverage here (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.cartv.com.nyud.net:8090/content/resear
NQE final paper:
http://www.darpa.mil/grandchallenge/NQEfinal1.pdf [darpa.mil]
And more announcements can be found on:
http://www.grandchallenge.org/ [grandchallenge.org]
Also, a good summary of things that have been happening can be found in the discussion forum:
https://dtsn.darpa.mil/grandc/forum/topic.asp?top
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A post by Espina reads:
Hi!
Re:More information and Video coverage here (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.tgdaily.com/2005/10/06/darpa2005_featur e_update/ [tgdaily.com]
"Blue Team" runs self-righting motorcycle at darpa Grand Challenge
http://www.tgdaily.com/2005/10/03/darpa2005_featur e_update/ [tgdaily.com]
DARPA Grand Challenge update #3: Interview with Team Cornell
http://www.tgdaily.com/2005/10/02/darpa_cornell_in terview/ [tgdaily.com]
DARPA Grand Challenge update #2: A chat with Team Mojavaton
h [tgdaily.com]
Re:Flash (Score:1)