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Transportation

Indianapolis Motor Speedway To Host Autonomous Car Race On Saturday (jalopnik.com) 51

New submitter Motard writes: Dallara Indy Lights racing cars outfitted as autonomous vehicles by Clemson University and programmed by various international collegiate teams will participate in a 20-lap race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on Saturday, Oct. 23rd 2021. The event will be livestreamed by the Indy Autonomous Challenge website. Nine teams representing 21 universities from 9 different countries will compete for a $1 million prize. [The second and third-placed teams will receive $250,000 and $500,000 respectively. Only those that complete the race in 25 minutes or less will be eligible for prize money.]
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Indianapolis Motor Speedway To Host Autonomous Car Race On Saturday

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday October 21, 2021 @05:07AM (#61912959)

    to figure out a way to automate boredom!

    • regardless of entertainment value, this will help to fuel research into even more advanced self driving tech which will eventually benefit us regular people
      • I see this as a lose/lose situation.

        1. If there are any car wrecks....it looks bad for the companies.

        2. If there are no wrecks...then what's the point for people to watch the damned race?

  • Robots will be driving Nascar cars in the future which will be all electric as gas powered cars will be banned !
    • by DarkOx ( 621550 ) on Thursday October 21, 2021 @06:51AM (#61913087) Journal

      There has always been two sometimes competing sometimes not ideas in auto racing - a test of driver skill - and pushing the technical envelope.

      Both have merit and both are interesting. Its only gets stupid when you do stupid stuff like Formula-E where spectators get to vote on 'power ups'. WTF - not sportsman like, and not technology just a lame way to garner some audience engagement.

      Honestly if they make contests like this about who can bring the best technology to the table and build a better automated driving systems on faster cars with lots of down force and tons of power, opening it up to running higher speeds and more aggressive lines in tighter traffic etc it could be a lot fun! With nobody in the cockpit a lot safety and ethics concerns go away too so there is no reason push to standardize platforms and implement rules against excessively risky driving/behaviors (well other than $$$ equipment getting destroyed). We could return to the early days of racing in a sense and really let the engineers 'try stuff' the corporate brands truly compete!

    • by mjwx ( 966435 )

      Robots will be driving Nascar cars in the future

      What do you mean in the future... Nascar only requires going forward and turning in one direction... We could already automate that. Would also make post race interviews better.

      • Would also make post race interviews better.

        I dunno, kinda hard to be "Let's go Brandon" from a couple weeks ago...hahaha.

    • Sounds good to me. By which I mean you won't need hearing protection to attend.

      I enjoy the sound of a motor as much as anyone else, I nail it getting on the highway so I can hear my 5.4 V8 at least twice a day... well, if there's no dumbshit getting on the highway as slowly as possible right in front of me on my way to work, which there usually is. People drive like complete dogshit here in Humboldt. It's literally worse than Texas, which was my former winner for shit driving.

      • By the gods, the worst driving I've ever seen is here in Sioux Falls. I got on the interstate behind a corvette a few days back. I'm thinking I'll finally get a chance to open her up. And I did. Right up to the point the on-ramp hit the main interstate. Then the dumb fuck literally stood on his fucking brakes and almost got an impala shoved up his ass for the trouble. The stupid bastard literally came to a stop and looked over his shoulder before starting again to merge. I swear, nobody understands w

  • The article mentions that third place receives $50,000 rather than $500,000.

    • The second and third-placed teams will receive $250,000 and $500,000 respectively.

      That makes much more sense, as "respectively" as it stands in the current sentence assigns more money to the 3rd place, than 2nd place.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • When they all go for the inside lane
    • Article says 9 teams, so unless they are allowed multiple cars per team. At most it is 9 cars?

      Over under on how many cars don't move from the start line? I am guessing two.
  • I wonder how something like this could be affected by the absence of the the threat of long-term consequences (e.g., death) for causing a crash. If two teams were colluding or one team had two cars, then a viable strategy would be for one of the two cars to take out as many of the competitors as possible in a spectacular crash in order to help a teammate.
    • It's already been NASCAR-ized by making it not actually open-wheel. So yeah, "safer" can definitely affect driving quality and taking humans out of the cars isn't as big a change in that regard. How about driverless cars reverting to true open-wheel to increase spectacular crashes? We'll need better fences, of course...
  • The beta test site was uncovered and people started registering accounts. Some of them had interesting profile pictures. [newsweek.com] I suspect much of their time will be spent banning and blocking accounts as people own the Trumpers with their posts.
  • by Impy the Impiuos Imp ( 442658 ) on Thursday October 21, 2021 @12:21PM (#61914597) Journal

    the second and third-placed teams will receive $250,000 and $500,000 respectively.

    "Sir, I know what 'respectively' means."

    Jerry: "I don't think you do."

"Conversion, fastidious Goddess, loves blood better than brick, and feasts most subtly on the human will." -- Virginia Woolf, "Mrs. Dalloway"

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