Fifteen Teams Selected for DARPA Grand Challenge 199
doughnuthole writes "The official posting has been made of the 15 teams that qualified for the Grand Challenge, seven of which completed the entire QID course. The top three teams, and thus those who get to start first, were the Red Team, SciAutonics II, and Team Caltech. The race starts at 6:30 am Saturday, with teams leaving every 5 minutes. A live webcast will be available at grandchallenge.org." Reader uss_valiant writes "Tomshardware runs an article about DARPA's Grand Challenge. It features new pictures, the DARPA video of the qualification and covers some technical challenges such as the obstacle detection."
Streaming Broadcast over the Internet (Score:5, Informative)
For all those of us who don't have access to the DARPA channel, we can stream the telecast live from here [cmu.edu].
These are the same people who appeared in this slashdot story [slashdot.org] and seems to be different from the "live webcast" mentioned in the story which only appears to have a tracking feature.
Re:Streaming Broadcast over the Internet (Score:5, Informative)
It uses about 150 MB RAM and 100% CPU on my celeron 1.4 GHZ...
According to this 3d map (updated every 30 seconds) the Caltech Bot is running since a 30 minutes or so. But I couldn't observe any movement...
As a side note: The videos on tomshardware [grandchallenge.org] are not exactly the same as those from the official website [grandchallenge.org] (very long ones, only the last 2 show vehicles that master the qualification without longer pauses).
The videos from tomshardware are much shorter, a lot less boring
This is the list of all qualified teams (from the new
1. (22) Red Team - Pittsburgh, PA
2. (21) SciAutonics II - Thousand Oaks, CA
3. (05) Team Caltech - Pasadena, CA
4. (07) Digital Auto Drive (DAD) - Morgan Hill, CA
5. (25) Virginia Tech - Blacksburg, VA
6. (23) Axion Racing - Westlake Village, CA
7. (02) Team CajunBot - Lafayette, LA
8. (13) Team ENSCO - Falls Church, VA
9. (04) Team CIMAR - Gainesville, FL and Logan, UT
10. (10) Palos Verdes High School RoadWarriors - Palos Verdes Estates, CA
11. (17) SciAutonics I - Thousand Oaks, CA
12. (20) Team TerraMax - Oshkosh, WI
13. (15) Team TerraHawk - Gardena, CA
14. (09) The Golem Group - Santa Monica, CA
15. (16) The Blue Team - Berkeley, CA
Re:Streaming Broadcast over the Internet (Score:2, Funny)
How do you manage to view it? I tried, but it seems to require some plugin that does not exist. Or, well, it exists but only for Microsoft's and Apple's OSes. Which seems pretty silly if the target audience is people with an interest in technology. :-O (OK, so I know there are geeks on OS X, but they're a small minority as far as I can tell.)
serious CPU pwn@g3 (Score:1)
Not sure about that 10MB download though. It loaded up way to quick (on cable) to be 10 megs, even with the shockwave install.
P.S. how come there was no freakin' advance notice of this on
Re:serious CPU pwn@g3 (Score:1)
Re:Streaming Broadcast over the Internet (Score:5, Informative)
Hmm, I don't know how you got that information, but their status page indicates that no-one has started, as of yet (5:10am in Barstow). The race is supposed to start at 6:30am, so that would make sense.
Maybe they had some incorrect data initially. Anyways, this slightly 'lighter' page [grandchallenge.org] shows the status.
btw, P4-2GHz also at 100% / 125MB RAM
Re:Streaming Broadcast over the Internet (Score:1)
don't know of any official shockwave plug-in for linux, sorry. but there are wa
Shockwave (Score:2)
Darn CMU robotics people (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Darn CMU robotics people (Score:3, Informative)
WTF: application/x-esm (Score:2)
MPlayer plays normal QuickTime no sweat, but what's this application/x-esm MIME type? And what Debian package do I have to install to view it?
I imagine even Windows and Mac users aren't too happy at having to install yet-another-codec when plenty of other streaming video works just fine. Or is ESM some kind of fancy research project and CMU is just forcing all of us to be beta testers?
Re:WTF: application/x-esm (Score:2, Informative)
A friend of mine works on ESM. It was developed at CMU and has been used for many recent lectures on campus.
Re:Darn CMU robotics people (Score:2)
This is not H&SS -- this is SCS. I suspect that most of the people working in the Robotics Institute use Linux on a daily basis, at work or at home. It is a legitimate point of frusteration.
Re:Streaming Broadcast over the Internet (Score:2, Informative)
Meanwhile the status board shows the Red Team and SciAutonics II neck on neck at 7 miles along the course each. Seems Team Caltech isn't doing too well , since they're still stuck on 1 mile from the start. Would love to know the story be
Re:Streaming Broadcast over the Internet (Score:2)
Re:Streaming Broadcast over the Internet (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Streaming Broadcast over the Internet (Score:2)
I agree 100%. I just went through all this, and it still didn't work. The QT window comes up, said Connecting for a few seconds, then says Ready, with an animating "Cylon/Knight Rider" bump moving back and forth. If I click the pause button it says "Live Broadcast - Paused" and then when I click Play it goes back to Ready.
Is anyone successfully watching this broadcast?
Re:Streaming Broadcast over the Internet (Score:2)
Departure. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Departure. (Score:2, Interesting)
Of course, this strategy assumes someone else will finish. Hmm... also, add a "kick in turboboost for the last 400 yards" feature to get a win. Boy that will tick off the others!
And, of course, fake AI etc to pass DARPA's initial checks so you get in the race after all. If someone actually did this and won, I won
Their response? (Score:3)
If part of the purpose of this race is to help develop an autonomous mobile supply carrier truck, then the strategy you talk about would actually be useful. Think of it as an "electronically coupled off-rail train", and the implications and applications become obvious.
Such technology would be useful for so many purposes - coupled with an actual autonomous navigation system that work, one or the other could
The race starts at 6:30 am Saturday, (Score:5, Insightful)
WHAT TIMEZONE???
Re:The race starts at 6:30 am Saturday, (Score:1)
CNN [cnn.com]
Re:The race starts at 6:30 am Saturday, (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The race starts at 6:30 am Saturday, (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The race starts at 6:30 am Saturday, (Score:1, Insightful)
CNN Story About The Race (Score:4, Informative)
waste of time? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:waste of time? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:waste of time? (Score:2)
it's so disappointing that only 4 teams remain and no one has even reached 10 miles yet...
anyone know what time the race ACTUALLY started? it's pretty sad to think they've been at it for 3.5 hours and two teams (SciAutonics and TerraMax) are still on their 1st mile...
person
not a waste of time at all (Score:4, Informative)
To get a full sized vehicle working at battlefield speeds with battlefield obstacles is a monumental challenge and almost certainly guaranteed to fail on the first try. Autonomous robotics is still a very young field, and the research published out there is generally some pretty rudimentary stuff done in a lab. Translating that stuff into a big complicated machine in a big complicated environment is a hell of a task and probably demonstrates some substantial holes in the current tech that weren't apparent from the confines of the lab.
This DARPA challenge does two excellent things for the field: Gives it a real goal and gives it a real deadline. Alot of research doesn't have a deadline and so researchers spend much of their time spinning their wheels (heh) on some of what i would consider, less important issues. This challenge gives a genuine goal to accomplish in a certain amount of time.
I definiately want to see the post-mortem on each team to see where they failed. In 2 more years, with this failure experience gained, perhaps a quarter of the teams will succeed or at least get further down the course.
Following... (Score:3, Interesting)
However, time after time they reduce the requirements for qualifying, and basically continually reduce the prestige of the event, now they are allowing all 15 teams to race, even though only 7 finished the much easier race (The last race, only the Carnegie Mellon team actually completed!)
Re:Following... (Score:5, Insightful)
A lot of folks are spending tons of time and energy attacking a hard problem. If DARPA thinks they deserve to watch their car leave the "official" start line, it's DARPA's decision to make. It's DARPA's event, they can run it however they want to, if they wanted to tape rubber ducks on the hoods prior to departure, they could ask eveyone to do so.
Re:Following... (Score:2)
If the teams can't finish they lose, if they finish, they win.
Re:Following... (Score:2)
It's not about results at all-- It's a high profile event in which teams get media coverage (from what I've seen so far CMU has totally won that race!) and prestige within the DARPA network of project managers.
Too Late (Score:1)
Re:Too Late (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm surprised that a network isn't covering this live or at least making an hour show out of it. They get free content and every geek in the world will be watching.
Cop-out? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Cop-out? (Score:3, Interesting)
nude mac desktops [67.160.223.119]
Helped program this as a Freshman (Score:5, Interesting)
It used multiple cameras mounted at different heights to build a 3D view of it's surroundings, and could judge all kinds of obstacles... though at the time (7 years ago) had a lot of trouble with streams and shadows. I was amazed that it could recognize stoplights correctly, and even signaled when it was changing lanes on a street.
Either way, it was a great project for a young would-be programmer to work on, very amazing stuff, and lots of cool toys to see in the Robotics Institute there.
For the rest of the world... (Score:5, Informative)
Assuming that "6.30 am" means local time in Barstow, California, that would be 6.30 PST -0800, or 14.30 GMT.
Course length set at 142 miles (Score:4, Informative)
Are we there yet? (Score:3, Insightful)
Look, folks it's engineering. It takes time. Frankly, competition is good. You have to understand, most of these schools/people participating don't make multi-million dollar robots for a living. CMU is probably the best (where's MIT??). Maybe CalTech or Berkeley is a close second. We didn't win the space race overnight. Engineering takes time. Eventually, the competition will learn the best techniques and everybody profits. It's is an educational thing...
DARPA checklist:
-sentient AI
-robust hardware design
-massively parallel neural net
-robust error handling
-programmed fundamental laws of robotics
-able to withstand a tank blast
-able to withstand a bomb shell
-able to withstand a nuclear/biological/chemical attack
-able to withstand a REALLY BIG MAGNET!
Seriously, I think even Sadam could beat our robots! Just buy the mother of all big magnets (or make one). Oh that's right, they need electricity! Sorry, carry on. Maybe they could get a donkey to run on treadmill and make a generator.... (Okay, not so seriously.)
So, how robust can any robot be? All I need is a really big magnet and it's screwed.
Yeah, how come the Terminator/Matrix/Inspector Gadget never had to worry about magnets?
Re:Are we there yet? (Score:2)
Remember how they used EMP in the Matrix movies to disable the sentinels? Guess what the "M" in "EMP" stands for, Einstein.
Cheers,
IT
Team Terramax - Incredible Vehicle (Score:4, Interesting)
I had the privilege of test-driving an MTVR on the obstacle course at their factory in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. This truck, fully loaded, could take on hills steeper than feel comfortable taking on in an ATV. We forded streams, climbed over barricades, and did steep side grades, all without breaking a sweat. I've got no doubt that this vehicle is up to the Grand Challenge, if the guys at OSU have their technology in order...
Re:Team Terramax - Incredible Vehicle (Score:2)
Re:Team Terramax - Incredible Vehicle (Score:2)
THIS JUST STARTED (Score:3, Informative)
Info [grandchallenge.org]
Re:THIS JUST STARTED (Score:2)
I've been watching the CMU webcast. This is apparently too difficult a challenge. Nearly all bots have started now, and several of them never went more than a mile. The sturdy humvee is even out of the race. Some vehicles apparently took their GPS waypoint corridor a little too wide and ended up in the fence or against the concrete blocks on the left side of the starting area.
It was pretty funny, those vehicles driving with full determination towards the fence... people backing off and the v
Red Team Disabled? (Score:2)
Re:Red Team Disabled? (Score:2)
Re:Red Team Disabled? (Score:2)
Four "Disabled?" (Score:2)
Including the favorite, Red Team.
TerraMax has not begun to move, yet.
Re:Four "Disabled?" (Score:2)
SciAutonics II is marked as Disabled, but keeps moving......
So far, it is in the lead.
Four teams now disabled (Score:2)
Re:Four teams now disabled (Score:2)
No new vehicle has started for some time now. Teams were supposed to start at 5-minute intervals, but only seven teams have started and we're 90 minutes into the race. Is there a jamup near the start, too?
10 miles now (Score:2)
Re:10 miles now (Score:2)
Re:10 miles now (Score:2)
Team CajunBot disabled (Score:2)
SciAutonics II disabled, but moving (Score:2)
Re:SciAutonics II disabled, but moving (Score:2)
Re:SciAutonics II disabled, but moving (Score:2)
Palos Verdes Road Warriors disabled at start (Score:2)
No vehicle has advanced for an hour now. Caltech is supposedly "running", but they've been at mile 1 for an hour. Team DAD is at mile 6, but paused. Are they being held up behind the bottleneck at mile 7, or what?
Re:Palos Verdes Road Warriors disabled at start (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Palos Verdes Road Warriors disabled at start (Score:2)
Re:Palos Verdes Road Warriors disabled at start (Score:4, Informative)
Other unoffical updates:
Sandstorm is out with a blown motor.
Sci II is supposedly still running.
Caltech is still running technically but is going nowhere fast. Its not stuck or anything tho.
Dad is running.
#25 has a stuck brake.
#23 has GPS problems but they may restart.
Navigator is stuck real bad in a fence. they are cutting it out.
#15 lost it hydralic pump
Cajunbot hit a obstacle right out of the gate.
Ensco hauled ass out of the gate, made its first turn OK but then rolled on the next.
Re:Palos Verdes Road Warriors disabled at start (Score:2, Funny)
Teams Ensco and Cimar are disabled (Score:2)
Next to start is the Ohio State monster truck. At the QID, it hit obstacles twice, so this should be entertaining.
What's happening with team DAD? (Score:2)
Re:What's happening with team DAD? (Score:2, Informative)
Real Driving (Score:3, Insightful)
There's also backtracking in case you can't find your way through a maze or roadblock.
Not to mention being able to ask for directions, finding fuel or requesting service.
How much brute force speed in terms of TFLOPS would be required?
fog of war (Score:2, Funny)
cyberrider == conscientious objector (Score:4, Funny)
Why is Team DAD still paused? (Score:2)
Free Team DAD! (Score:2)
next year's event (Score:5, Funny)
Re:next year's event (Score:2)
The winning vehicle (Score:3, Funny)
They also needed to widen that front sensor and put some HID LEDs in a chaser for effect.
Then hire William Daniels to replace all the chime codes with his voice.
Golem Group moving up (Score:2)
Re:Golem Group moving up (Score:2)
Tracking for Linux (Score:3, Informative)
Everybody out except Golem Group and TerraMax (Score:2)
TerraMax disabled - only Golem left running (Score:2)
It's over. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:It's over. (Score:2)
Game Over (Score:2)
All teams disabled (Score:2)
I liked it better when Monty Python did it (Score:2)
That was so much fun... (Score:2)
Let's do it again tomorrow!
Actually, DARPA did hold out tomorrow as an alternate date in case the event couldn't be held today. And I'll bet some of the teams would be up for it!
Unofficial results (Score:2)
Looks like all vehiches have been disabled and the furthest any of them got was 7 miles. Red Team tied with SciAutonics at the 7 mile mark before going kaput.
it's over (Score:2)
Re:Weird fact (Score:4, Funny)
Last year I had a pottery course with a person who claimed her sisters, friends, dog trainers mother in law actually handled funding at DARPA. She said that this was actually a nefarious plan to speed up the development of killer robot cars that will one day rule the world!
Re:Weird fact (Score:3, Interesting)
But this is how DARPA works - it is very much an "Old boys" network. I was a postdoc in a robotics lab at a large university a few years back and we were competing for DARPA money for this project where robots walk up stairs. There was a DARPA guy who was a real colonel who would come to listen to presentations, and if he liked you then you got money. We didn't get the money. This was a project for a stair climbing robot, and
Re:Weird fact (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Weird fact (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Weird fact (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:7 miles and that's it (Score:2)
Re:Withdrawn (Score:2, Informative)
Sandstorm failure reports (Score:3, Informative)
From the wires of the Associated Press: [sfgate.com]