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RoboCup 2007 Opens At Georgia Tech

Craig writes "The 2007 installment of RoboCup has begun; individual events opened to the public today. RoboCup is an international robotics symposium and competition whose goal is to advance the fields of robotics and artificial intelligence to the point that in 2050 a robot soccer team can defeat the human world champions. This year, RoboCup is located on the Georgia Tech campus in Atlanta, GA, marking the first time a university is hosting it and only the second time since it began in 1993 that it is located in the United States."

34 of 52 comments (clear)

  1. "Defeat" by PsEvo · · Score: 3, Funny

    "point that in 2050 a robot soccer team can defeat the human world champions."

    Be rid of "soccer" and "champions" and you have an interesting article!

    --
    "ATI cards are like buses...They're huge, red and have bad drivers."
    1. Re:"Defeat" by CaptainPatent · · Score: 1

      "point that in 2050 a robot soccer team can defeat the human world champions."

      Be rid of "soccer" and "champions" and you have an interesting article! No... that's not till 2058!
      --
      Well, back to rejecting software patent applications.
  2. Oh, man. by Neil+Blender · · Score: 1

    In 2050, I am going to get so fucking high and totally watch that game.

    1. Re:Oh, man. by iknownuttin · · Score: 1
      In 2050, I am going to get so fucking high and totally watch that game.

      Damn straight! I'll be 85! And at my age then, fuck yeah! I deserve to be high!! I'm with you man!

      --
      I prefer Flambe as apposed flamebait.
    2. Re:Oh, man. by crashelite · · Score: 1

      i cant wait for you both to be saying "dude that robot just got kicked in the nuts"

      --
      (yes i know i suck at spelling fell free to correct my grammar and/or spellin i dont care, im still not going to change
    3. Re:Oh, man. by PW2 · · Score: 1

      it'll probably one of this guy's robots

  3. Good Times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Got a chance to go to the 2005 games in Osaka Japan when we won second place in the small size league. That whole week of competition was intense.

  4. should have been last week. by qw0ntum · · Score: 1

    Last week was the Robotics Science and Systems conference, also at GA Tech. Some of the biggest robotics researchers worldwide (such as the guy who lead the team that won the DARPA Grand Challenge last year) were all there to talk about the latest advances in the field... I think they were originally scheduled to be the same weekend; oh well.

    --
    'Every story, if continued long enough, ends in death.' --Ernest Hemingway
    1. Re:should have been last week. by MaelstromX · · Score: 1

      They were in fact scheduled to coincide but you don't want them to actually overlap and make people have to deal with time conflicts. RSS was Wednesday through Saturday and as soon as it ended everybody who was involved in it could begin to focus on preparing for RoboCup which officially commenced yesterday (Monday).

  5. Re:Georgia Tech Campus... by fohat · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Actually I would mod both posts offtopic because this is a story about robots...

    --
    Is there heaven? Is there Hell? Is that a Tuna Melt I smell?-Primus
  6. Re:Georgia Tech Campus... by Tmack · · Score: 1

    It's hotter than Hell down here!

    And humid!

    And folks who think W is doing a great job - the 30%+- of the population who think Bush is doing a great job? They're my neighbors here in Georgia! You know: the big SUV driving obese folks with the pristine "W '04 " bumper stickers.

    Those robots better be running on oil! None of that pansy "alternative fuel" shit - but OIL!!

    Great test for robots going into hostile climates!

    Yeh, hot and humid yet it doesnt rain! Well not till last week, still 12" in drought.

    OT I know, but I always find it funny that its usually those same SUV drivers with the Bush '04 stickers and the WWJD/Jesus Loves You stickers that are carrying only a driver, doing about 90+ on I75, and are weaving in and out of traffic flipping people off that honk at them.

    Bleh, and off I go to play in that very traffic, to GaTech none-the-less to try to go swim, same facility thats hosting the robo cup. Actually, its on the floor directly over the pool (at the time it was built, just a few years ago, one of the largest suspended concrete structure in the world)!

    Tm

    --
    Support TBI Research: http://www.raisinhope.org
  7. Robots by mhannibal · · Score: 5, Funny

    "to the point that in 2050 a robot soccer team can defeat the human world champions" That'll primarily be due to the freakin' laser beams attached to their heads...

  8. RoboCup coverage by MaelstromX · · Score: 2, Informative

    Having submitted this story (yes that's me up there) I thought this deserved a mention since Slashdot has reported on RoboCup in the past (2001, 2002) 2004, 2006).

    I'm also covering this for our campus newspaper (click my name above for the preview article in last week's issue), so if anybody has anything they wanted to know or see pictures of let me know and I can try to make it happen. As I was bogged down with classes today I haven't seen any of the robots compete yet (although last week I "met" some still-unfinished robots being built by Georgia Tech students) but I intend to spend at least a few hours there tomorrow and every day the rest of the week.

    (BTW, is anybody on here a participant in the event?)

    1. Re:RoboCup coverage by pooya · · Score: 2, Informative

      If you like to know what Robocup is about. Watch this wmv video of the highlights of Robocup 2005 in Osaka.

    2. Re:RoboCup coverage by darkfish32 · · Score: 1
      Yep, I'm on the Northern Bites, the 4-legged league team from Bowdoin College, ME.

      Games are under way, and we've seen some interesting play so far. Some of our league's team sites are:
      • http://robocup.bowdoin.edu/blog (please don't crash it!)
      • http://nubots.blogspot.com/
      • http://www.germanteam.org/tiki-index.php
      • http://www.microsoft-hellhounds.de/en/
      • http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~robosoccer/legged/
      • http://www.cs.utexas.edu/~AustinVilla/?p=home

      The world cup site is http://www.robocup-us.org/ as mentioned above.

      Check out some recent video at http://youtube.com/watch?v=AqclRmMCyWA
      Unfortunately, this is pretty ugly play for both teams involved. It was a practice match, and much (like a well-functioning wireless network) wasn't set up yet. Our team has no network communication and is missing some dogs at times :-)

      Hopefully we'll have some better video up soon on google vids (it's capturing from the camera now, regulation play only started this morning)
    3. Re:RoboCup coverage by jb68321 · · Score: 1

      A friend of mine was working with the GA Tech Small (soccer-playing) robot division, but we're out of town right now (until Friday). Here are lots of pictures and a schedule though, for those in the Atlanta area or looking for updates. We'll post some "before" GA Tech pictures to that gallery sometime soon, too.

  9. Re:Georgia Tech Campus... by geek2718 · · Score: 1

    Actually I would mod both posts offtopic because this is a story about robots... ...and these posts are about people who still support Bush and drive SUVs. I'm sorry, how is this OT?
  10. Different robot soccer leugues by MoHaG · · Score: 1

    Not all RoboCup robots are humanoid though.... Some are small wheeled robots with colored blobs on the top to ease their detection....

    Another league exists: FIRA... FIRA's "RoboWorld Cup 2007" takes place between 14 and 17 July.... I'm actually doing a team's vision system... (not for the RoboWorld Cup though....)

    1. Re:Different robot soccer leugues by bladesjester · · Score: 1

      There was also another class of competition using the Aibo dog robots. I don't know if they're still doing it or not.

      My univeristy was doing the small wheeled robot division. I kept getting asked to participate, but never had the time because I was also working. Instead, I got called in for trouble shooting and brain storming when I had the free time since I had experience that my friends in the competition didn't.

      --
      Everything I need to know I learned by killing smart people and eating their brains.
  11. International Robotics Symposium by Skee09 · · Score: 1

    Wow! I love symposia.

  12. Re:Georgia Tech Campus... by parasonic · · Score: 1

    Just drive down Ferst any day, and you will see very few SUV's. Half the people at Tech post on Slashdot at least twice a day, and those who don't are management or psychology majors. It's probably half-Indian/Oriental at this point, so no, not that many SUV-driving rednecks.

  13. The old school by Deadstick · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Georgia Tech is doing some cool stuff with aerial robotics:

    http://www.gtri.gatech.edu/atas/teams/aerialroboti cs.html

    Kinda wish I was there now instead of 1962...;-)

    rj

  14. Participant by Spearhawk · · Score: 4, Informative

    First perhaps I should mention that RoboCup isn't only about football (soccer), although it's a majority, but also has leagues in rescue and a fairly new one called @home. I'm a participant on the rescue league (part of the Swedish team from Uppsala) and so far I can say that none of us is very impressed with Georgia Tech's handling of the cup. To start with there is no internet at the competition and development area which causes a lot of inconveniency whenever you need something of it (which is quite often). You'll either have to use the paid services one floor down, which I clocked to an amazing 700 byte per second when I tried to download the Linux headers I needed for driver installation, or walk at least five minutes to the dorms where the net is ok but you can't really do that every time you want to look something up. Secondly they don't seem to be able to keep the power up for more than a few hours at a time, it can go down quite unexpectedly without warnings. While this isn't much of a problem for my team seeing as we use only laptops and battery powered devices it is a real bother for many of the teams which uses normal stationary computers and other such devices. Being a student I never been to another RoboCup world cup (although I was at the German Open) but my teachers assures us that they never seen anything like this before. It is quite a bit of bad publicity for Georgia Tech.

    1. Re:Participant by I82Much · · Score: 1

      I agree completely. I'm participating in the Four legged league and on the first day, the lighting was absolutely atrocious. Rules specify that the field must be lit to 1000 lux; in the corners the lighting was more like 250 lux. We got some more lights yesterday, but the fields still aren't lit very evenly.

      Even worse, the room we're all coding in is lit by 20 watt bulbs so it's ridiculously dark, except for the glare of computer screens

    2. Re:Participant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I'm also a past participant (about 3 years) from a few years ago.

      There used to be a lot more innovation than what we see now and I'm not sure if that is because ideas have been perfected or if new rules are preventing teams from straying too far from the norm. I know of quite a few Universities which used to be part of Robocup but quit ~3 years ago because they lacked interest/students/funding (yes, it is very expensive).

      In 2050 I'm guessing that RoboCup will be similar to Forumla 1 car racing in that they will both have very strict rules on how you should design your robot/car. Why should the world's best soccer player only have 2 legs and 2 arms? And why should they be limited to the amount of power you can pack into a small space? I guess the question you need to ask of RoboCup is whether it is focussed on a fair balanced competition against a human soccer team, or whether the goal is simply to build the best robot possible (no limits) and expand future research. Universities are only involved in Robocup because it is researching new areas of artificial intelligence and to a lesser degree, robot design and construction. So if too many rules are put in place, the amount of research possible is reduced severely. If new nano-technology materials are produced allowing for better-than-human qualities in robots, is this a bad thing (I'd say no).

      Does anyone know where we can find the Team Description Papers (TDPs) for 2007? These are well worth a read as they describe how each team built their robots, as well as what technology they have included.

    3. Re:Participant by c++-or-death · · Score: 1

      I've participated in RoboCup in the 3D-Simulation league from 2004 to 2006.

      Having no internet access is really a bad thing, and the only time that this happened when I participated was in Lisbon '04. They had only 255 IP addresses, which worked well the first two days. But when all of the about 1700 people were on site, the network broke down ;)

      2005 in Osaka and 2006 in Bremen worked very well on this infrastructural things

      I've never heard about power outtakes at RoboCup competitions. This must be even worse than the problems of the Lisbon '04 RoboCup...

  15. Re:Georgia Tech Campus... by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

    I think the OP was complaining that there are a lot of SUV-driving, Bush-supporting morons in the surrounding city, which is true.

    --

    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  16. Pictures, Video, and Commentary by hizook · · Score: 4, Informative

    I was actually a volunteer there yesterday during the team-practice session. I have some pictures and videos of the event at Hizook.com.

  17. Why wait until 2050? by LarryLong · · Score: 1

    Well, if there are no limits, somebody should see me about my robot soccer team concept. 1. RoboGoalie is slightly taller than the goals and slightly wider than the goals, and is made of completely solid material. Now all you need to do is come up with a robot that can kick _one_ goal in 90 minutes.......

  18. Re:ridiculous by socz · · Score: 1

    yesterday on some science show i saw a guy with "the most advanced bionic leg" in the world!! That guy could play metal to metal! They could even rig it so the robots have padded skin, so it wouldn't even be so hard on the bionic leg guy!

    --
    My abilities are only limited by my imagination
  19. Re:Georgia Tech Campus... by bdjacobson · · Score: 1

    Half the people at Tech post on Slashdot at least twice a day Yup :)
  20. Re:Georgia Tech Campus... by MonkWB · · Score: 1

    1/1000 at ga state =0

  21. Just boys with toys? by _3dom · · Score: 1

    When I read through some of the replies I get the feeling that people may perceive this competition as a pointless little toy problem. And you are partly right - it is a toy problem. But it is far from being pointless one.

    To me (and I assume most of the other participants), RoboCup is about something else entirely. It is about developing new technologies on a complete systems level. Apart from finding some neat hardware solutions ranging from simple wheels to dynamic humanoid gaits the more interesting overarching theme is the advance of technology on AI aspects - such as goal oriented behavior and agent cooperation.

    Sure, it is a lot about hardware and toys. You start tinkering with the hardware platform of your choice - be it some shop-bought Aibo doggy or your own awesome little humanoid creation. There is no limit but costs and human resources. And even if you are just a student with not many resources at hand you can always bring your ball-pushing Lego creation.

    And it is true that a large part of the competition seems to consist of robots miserably standing and wiggling in place or randomly tipping over every other minute. But to be fair, the participants are trying to catch up on a few billion years of good old-fashioned evolution while unfortunately fighting with rather pathetic problems such as bad network connectivity and random power outages (see the comment by Spearhawk).

    My point is that for most of us it is often very hard to get the proper funding and benchmarking environment for research on autonomous and self-sufficient agents exhibiting semi-intelligent behavior.

    Personally, I do not care all that much about soccer. But similar to the DARPA Grand Challenge everybody understands the game and more importantly it is a good way to gain public interest in and acceptance of robotics. From a roboticist's perspective soccer is just the right mix of a fairly simple rule-based environment and open-end multi-agent complexity. The real fun starts once you have teams competing on the field - since now you have the whole real-time adaptivity thing going.

    I guess my point is that you can go on and develop robots from a complete-agent perspective by solving the perfect toy problem without worrying too much about when and how the technology will benefit society and why anybody would pay for it right now.

    Personally I have absolutely no doubts that the solutions found by working on a toy problem such as soccer will more or less directly benefit society in the near future. We for example are a Swiss team from ETH Zurich participating in the brand new "Nanogram League". We are able to fully control robots with sizes of only a few times the width of a human hair - and not many people in the world can do that. In about 6 months we have developed an entirely new technology just to compete in this event. And yes, it is still "simple" tasks in a two-dimensional environment.

    Sure, at this point we are talking mere speculation... but there is no reason why this technology does not scale into 3D fluidic environments... in clear text: you can potentially propel tiny agents that go and find that hidden tumor somewhere in your body and destroy it... how useful would that be?

    Here some illustrating movies of our robots and links to other fun stuff that might be of interest to you:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lnLGpl1N7Ns
    http://www.iris.ethz.ch/msrl/research/special/nano gram/

    some media coverage:
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/artic le/2007/07/07/AR2007070700774.html
    http://www.cnn.com/video/#/video/tech/2007/07/07/s chneider.robocup.competition.cnn

  22. Humanoid Soccer Final Video by nimbro · · Score: 1

    Here is the video of the Humanoid Soccer Final: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ICgL1OWsn58 In the match the titleholder Team Osaka (Japan) met team NimbRo from Freiburg University (Germany). The same two teams had met in the two previous years. The 2007 final was one of the best humanoid soccer games ever, if not the best. Team Osaka played with one goalie and one field player while NimbRo used two field players. The Osaka robots were very quick to approach the ball and to kick it across the field. The NimbRo robots excelled in one-on-one fights for the ball and also demonstrated nice team play. The exciting game was open until the end. The final score was 8:6 for NimbRo. The NimbRo robots not only won the KidSize soccer competition, but also the TeenSize Penalty Kick, where they defeated Pal Technology (Spain) 5:4 in the final. More information and images can be found here: http://www.nimbro.net/