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Autonomous Robots' Desert Race

celady writes: "From KurzweilAI.net, apparently DARPA, the main research and development center for the department of defense, is going to fund an all-terrain robot race . The robots will race from Los Angeles to Las Vegas completely without human intervention. This could prove useful in the battlefield someday. DARPA really has some interesting projects going on. This one is BORING compared to the Vortex Combustor and the Chip-Size Atomic Clock. Watch the DARPA site for updates."

11 of 93 comments (clear)

  1. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 3, Funny

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  2. Re:no biggie by qedigital · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Granted, GPS would be an integral component of mapping and directional navigation. However, a competiting robot would have to dynamically respond to its surroundings (other robots, terrain, unforeseen obstacles) as well as be capable of tasks such as refueling (as the article suggests).

    The challenge presented by this competition is enormous. The combination of speed, AI, ruggedness, and endurance is exciting as it hasn't really been seen outside military applications.

    It's also great to see that some real money is likely to be fronted and should therefore attract some high-profile organizations as well as some interesting ideas. Competitions are one of the best ways to promote development by outlining clear goals, bringing like-minded people together to exchange ideas, and gain public media support for often obscure topics.

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    Rapidly approaching the Zener knee...

  3. could prove useful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    The robots will race from Los Angeles to Las Vegas completely without human intervention. This could prove useful in the battlefield someday.

    So LA finally declared war in Las Vegas? Guess it was bound to happen sooner or later.

  4. AI Si, People No??? by DrewK · · Score: 4, Interesting

    There used to be an annual race like this that ended in 1989 I believe when parts of the area became National Park. So the Machines already have more rights than us Citizens?

  5. More than meets the eyes.... by Kirby-meister · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Autonomous bots, transform!"

  6. 1 mil? Hell, let's get together a Slashdot team! by silentbozo · · Score: 4, Funny

    Who else wants together to field a robot? We'll cobble it out of junkyard parts, load linux on it, strap it into CowboyNeal's car and turn it loose. Hell, at least it'll be a great excuse to go to Las Vegas...

  7. The Vortex looks interesting? by gazbo · · Score: 3, Funny
    From the project page:
    Top Technical Challenges
    • Start, throttling, shutdown, and restart
    • Sustained operations
    So, in other words, their main problems are starting it, controlling it, stopping it, and keeping it running in the meantime. No doubt we can expect a prototype soon.

  8. Re:Wierd by mshiltonj · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is it robot day or something?

    Maybe slashdot needs a "Robot" topic? The topic is getting incredibly interesting now. In just a few few year, we may have autonomous, social, biped androids doing lots of interesting things.

    I've said it before: All I want is a house robot that will vaccuum, do the dishes, get the paper, bring me a beer, etc. It plug itself into an outlet to charge itself when not in use.

    And make biscuits. ;-)

    A finite environment, with finite tasks. When is GE going to bring that good thing to life?

  9. Make it Fly by msheppard · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Build a RC plane (they have these)
    Hook up a GPS (they have these)
    Hook up the gyro controlled auto pilot (they have these, yes, for RC planes)
    Punch in the Co-Ords, and launch it.

    I guess maybe solar powered electric might be best so you don't have to carry around a lot of feul.

    M@

    --
    Krispy Cream is people
  10. CMU Robotics by imadork · · Score: 3, Interesting
    When I was at CMU I knew a few people in the Robotics department. I know that at the time they were working on the problem of how to get a computer to drive a car by itself. AI, Machine vision, recognizing the lines painted on the road -- all that good stuff. I know that they ran all sorts of experiments with computers driving actual cars, but with human drivers as a backup.

    I heard a story while I was there (that was never really confirmed) that on one trip, they decided to ditch the human driver in the car, and see how well the machine could do on its own. (They followed behind it in another car, IIRC, and probably had some remote-control apparatus as well, I'd imagine.) They got from Pittsburgh to just outside DC, at which point a Virginia Cop pulled the car over -- only because it didn't have a driver!

    Can anyone currently at CMU confirm whether this is true? I've always wondered about that.

  11. off-road? What about on-ground? by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Does it have to be a ground/water-only robot?

    If it can fly, everything becomes simple.

    One person already pointed out combining a GPS with an R/C plane - Maybe that would work, although there's the issue of landing - The "finish line" may not have room allow a glide-in landing.

    Put a GPS and a computer in a chopper, though... Someone had a link to an open-source helicopter autopilot project a few robotics articles ago.

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    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?