Students Win NASA Moon Robot Competition
Mikkeles writes "After a grueling five-day test of material-collecting ability, the team from Laurentian University returned home to Sudbury, Canada with the win in NASA's second annual Lunabotics competition. Second place went to North Dakota, and West Virginia University placed third."
During the Apollo manned lunar exploration program, NASA astronauts trained in Sudbury ... visiting Sudbury because it purportedly resembled the lifeless surface of the moon...
Anybody want a peanut?
Yeah Canada!
I mean, we built the legs for the Lunar Module, and that lead to us designing and building the robotic arms used on the Shuttle and the ISS. And many of the top people in the Gemini, and Apollo program were Canadians, hired by NASA after the AVRO Arrow CF-105 was cancelled in the late 1950s.
ttyl
Farrell
CAN-CON 2019 - Ottawa's only book oriented Science Fiction Convention! October 18-20, Sheraton Hotel, Ottawa, Canada h
Imagine that! Students win a competition for... students. Enlightening title on both /. and NASA
I participated in this competition, and my team probably has a photo of Laurentian's robot somewhere. In the meantime, this link has a picture of the robot. It's difficult to find a larger image anywhere online.
They talk about a winning team and then post a picture of some other team's entry. WTF? I'm curious as to what the winning entry looked like.
Here you go!
It is awfully bizarre that the only picture they show is not the winning entry.
When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
Some possible explanation might be inferred from the fact that they spent more time talking about and with the losing US teams than about and with the winning team from another country.
The tyrant will always find a pretext for his tyranny - Aesop
During the competition, the teams remotely controlled excavators — called "Lunabots" — to determine which could collect the most simulated lunar soil over 15 minutes.
So, were they robots or not?
TO(-riginal)FA doesn't seem to give any details concerning autonomous behavior either.
If they were autonomous, what environmental interaction(-s) did they engage in?