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Desert Robot Race Update, With Video

An anonymous reader writes "Several teams have moved forward with their bid to run the Barstow-Vegas Desert Robot Race (For those not familiar check out http://www.darpa.mil/grandchallenge ). As of today 55 teams are registered, some of the most interesting are Cal Tech, AI Magic, and the Red Team out of Carnegie Mellon. Also fishing around the Red Team site, there is a pretty nifty video."

6 of 180 comments (clear)

  1. Interesting project which can save some lives by Pvt_Waldo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    One of the huge applications of autonomous vehicles is the removal of landmines. Systems that can scout out, identify, mark, and even remove mines could save the death and maiming of thousands every year.

    Our poor earth is littered with millions of land mines left over from past conflicts, and from current ones too.

    Don't knock technology like this. It can be used for good too. Even to clean up after the bad.

    1. Re:Interesting project which can save some lives by wo1verin3 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      >> Yeah, but I think you're missing the point ..
      >> just because it can be used for good doesn't
      >> mean it will be ..

      So you think that this should not exist given the following information:

      1) There are potentially good uses
      2) There are potentially bad uses

      How long have you worked for the RIAA? :)

      In all seriousness though, all types of research, concepts, and development can be used in a way that is not beneficial to the greater good of humanity. Even a fork can be used to inflict pain upon another.

  2. Re:Interesting project which will kill a lot of fo by tessaiga · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you look at history, anytime one side was able to kill the other without having to really risk themselves, the shitty side of history results -- genocide, oppression, etc. Just because it's your side that happens to have the better guns, tech, germs or whatever doesn't mean it's a Good Thing.

    Don't you mean anytime one side's leaders?

    Or, put another way, it's easier to be yelling "Bring it on" when you're half a world away from the battlefield. One of the big changes in modern warfare is that wars aren't between neighbors much anymore. When you were invading someone right next to you, there was always the possibility that if things went sour, they'd follow your retreating forces right back to your capital.

    --
    The bold print giveth, and the fine print taketh away ...
  3. The Red Whittaker hype machine by Animats · · Score: 4, Insightful
    There's heavy hype out of Red Whittaker's group. He wants to build a machine from the ground up, needs $5 million to do it, and doesn't have it. The fancy video is a fund-raising effort. Note that nothing in that video shows work done for the Grand Challenge, other than some pretty design pictures on a screen.

    That red Jeep has nothing to do with the Grand Challenge. That's Navlab 11, the Robotics Institute's latest test vehicle. the Robotics Institute, headed by Charles Thorpe, took a look at the Grand Challenge and decided to pass. He told me "If we entered, we'd have to win", and since he's mostly Government-funded, he'd need another source of funding, which he didn't have. Whittaker, who heads a related but separate operation, the Field Robotics Center, decided to do it on his own.

    Whittaker issues a constant stream of trival press releases, like Team Equipped with Laptops and Office Equipment. We have considerable respect for the Robotics Institute at CMU, but this is becoming embarassing.

    We take Team Caltech seriously, but not Whittaker's operation.

    We will give a presentation on September 24, in EE380 at Stanford, on how we're doing it, and will show our vehicle, which isn't vaporware.

    John Nagle
    Team Overbot

  4. Re:Interesting project which will kill a lot of fo by boomgopher · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I just don't think that most geeks would want to be a part of it if they really thought it over, which is why I said what I did.

    Well yeah, and North Korea is probably using Linux to track which 'anti-revolutionaries' and their families to kill or lock up in concentration camps.
    So should we stop coding? That's the world we live in man.


    --
    Your hybrid is not saving the environment. Its purpose is to make you feel good about buying something.
  5. Re:Interesting project which will kill a lot of fo by davejenkins · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I would prefer it be very difficult to kill people in general. That way, we'd only do it when we really needed to.

    Everyone prefers not to kill (except the murderous bastards). This is a straw-man position, and politically naive.

    If you look at history, anytime one side was able to kill the other without having to really risk themselves, the shitty side of history results -- genocide, oppression, etc. Just because it's your side that happens to have the better guns, tech, germs or whatever doesn't mean it's a Good Thing.

    No, if you look at history, shitty things happen all the time. There is evidence to the contrary: when forces are balanced, then only the tension builds, not the solution (eventually the tension breaks with very bad results: UK-DE before WWI, US-JP before WWII, UK-FR 100 years war, GR-Persia...). The only time peace occurs is when overwhelming force exists on one side (the benevolent side).

    Hell, look at us: We've been way out ahead for, what, 20 years now and already we're invading other nations so our political leaders can distract the masses from economic problems or the fact that they can't stop terrorism (70% of Americans believe Iraq sponsored 9-11, and why not? They're ay-rabs, ain't they?).

    How does political trolling like this get modded up to +5?

    Anyhow, I understand that we live in reality and that these things happen. I just don't think that most geeks would want to be a part of it if they really thought it over, which is why I said what I did.

    "Most geeks" is a spurious term. If you think they are all left-leaning pinkos, you`re wrong. If you think they`re Edvard Teller madmen, you`re wrong. Geeks are all over the spectrum. I would imagine there are some geeks who lost their brothers/fathers/sisters/mothers in 9-11, and would have no qualms in putting the hurt on some goat-farking terrorist camp via remote control.