DARPA Robot Contest Update 142
rbrandis writes "DARPA has selected a wide variety of teams, after a series of last minute rule changes and a solid outpouring of anger, the final list of competitors for DARPA's Grand Challenge robot race has been set with 25 teams preparing to try and win a $1 million prize." The anger is exemplified by submissions like this one: Totally_Lost writes "Last spring we flocked to DARPA's Grand Challenge media event in Los Angeles to be told that they wanted everyone's participation in their Robot race this March. They told us that the race would be open to Mom and Pop garage sized participants - and Lied. This fall, nearly 100 teams completed technical paper submissions, with about half to be eliminated from the $1M prize race because they were too small to be 'real' competitors. Well, the rejected robot racing teams got together in Las Vegas last month, and formed the International Robot Racing Federation. This month IRRF is announcing its first competition with $1M in prizes pledged by sponsors, and lesser prizes too, to be offered in a REAL OPEN Challenge next September (providing the race that DARPA failed to deliver)."
DARPA not open in its policies, i'm shocked. (Score:5, Funny)
It looks like DARPA wins... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:It looks like DARPA wins... (Score:1)
KFG
Re:It looks like DARPA wins... (Score:3, Insightful)
What were they afraid of ? A mom and pop low budget garage organization making a contractor or prestigious university team look silly ? O
Re:It looks like DARPA wins... (Score:1)
Well, maybe it's a bit of reverse trade protectionism, because I've always kinda thought that was Burt Rutan's job.
KFG
Rutan is the monied-man's Langley. (Score:2)
Re:It looks like DARPA wins... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:It looks like DARPA wins... (Score:2)
Re:It looks like DARPA wins... (Score:2)
IE they chose an open format instead of a limited format. I can't see logically how this means something other than they must have WANTED as many people to show up as possible. When they got an 'overwhelming' response they should have
Re:It looks like DARPA wins... (Score:2)
Re:It looks like DARPA wins... (Score:2)
Re:It looks like DARPA wins... (Score:2)
Wasn't DARPA justified in their decision? (Score:2, Interesting)
The presentation of the article, however, seems to be biased in favor of the poor losers; why?
Is there evidence that they were indeed up to snuff but were drubbed anyway?
Re:Wasn't DARPA justified in their decision? (Score:2, Interesting)
I have a friend on one of the University teams. The professor in charge, who had connections to JPL, forced them to design the robot to loose by setting it's top speed to slow to complete the route in the allocated time.
As someone who spent 6 years working for a defense contractor, almost exclusively on DARPA contracts, I can attest that DARPA and the research industry around it have all the typical problems of research as a
Re:Wasn't DARPA justified in their decision? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wasn't DARPA justified in their decision? (Score:3, Insightful)
They didn't get "drubbed." They never even got the chance to get drubbed under the assumed parameters of the competition.
Had DARPA said something along the lines of "Ya'll are welcome to give it a go, but we have to warn you that entries are strictly limited and we reserve the right to make the decision of who gets to play and who doesn't on an arbritrar
I am on a team-- Comment on $$ & advanced tech (Score:3, Insightful)
We compete in a similar, less-publicized contest. We have three members on our team and had a starting budget of $300. We had our PC104 board and $200 diff. GPS donated, and all of the coding has thus far been done by the three of us. We didn't have any money,
Re:I am on a team-- Comment on $$ & advanced t (Score:2)
Re:I am on a team-- Comment on $$ & advanced t (Score:1)
Our team's website [utulsa.edu]
I am afraid that it is rather lacking on updates and was done very poorly. I need to get it up-to-date and looking better. It was put online very quickly by request of a sponsor. I promise that I will update it and put new pictures up, since the pictures our framegrabber can now take really puts the one on the front page to shame. I also plan to upload the source code to our vision and navigation
Re:I am on a team-- Comment on $$ & advanced t (Score:2)
This was demonstrated over a hundred years ago by Samuel Pierpont Langley [msstate.edu]. He had everything: the education, the money, the resources and he used them all to try to create a flying machine - only to be beaten by two bicycle makers.
Re:Wasn't DARPA justified in their decision? (Yes) (Score:1)
As in, they like to use ingredients DARPA people are allergic to, or what?
I think if DARPA wants to limit entries, they should do so up front. It wouldn't be unusual for them to not ebven publicise the event and individually contact each organization who might be interested.
When a private company takes bids or opens a contest according to publicly disclosed rules then rewrites the rules without warning, that's a crime. DARPA should follow the rules set by the government for the people, e
Re:Wasn't DARPA justified in their decision? (Score:2)
Seems like the less advanced teams either would not have shown up or could have been weeded out in preliminary trials. That was the whole point of this exercise... to not prejudge solutions until they were proven or disproven in the field. As far as I understand, most of the entrants are still working on their machines, so to weed anyone out that submits a complete entry at this
$400 hammer, rest of the story (Score:2)
Sure the government has spend $400 on a hammer. You would too, if you needed to use a hammer in a room filled with an explosive mixture, which was the case. There are some alloys that do not spark, your dirt cheap $20 hardware store hammer is not one, and is not something that anyone in their right mind would allow near someplace where explosive mixtures are common.
If you are going to use a hammer regularly though, the $20 Home Depot hammer is a wate of money, and you will harm your joints by using it.
Nice to see the technology is catching up... (Score:4, Interesting)
Of course people don't tend to realize that robotics is in use all around them, all the time. A robot is "A mechanical device that sometimes resembles a human and is capable of performing a variety of often complex human tasks on command or by being programmed in advance", or alternately, "a mechanism that can move automatically".
Besides the mechanical aspect necessary for something to be robotic, there is the usual criteria for a useful electronic circuit. It must sense, decide, and act. Even a door-opening device at your local supermarket can do this; it senses that something has entered sensor range, it decides whether the signal is strong enough to warrant opening the door (partly based on its sense of what its function switch is set to) and then decides whether or not to open it. The act stage in this case causes motion, which is what makes it a robot.
While we often hope to see robots become more useful around the house, I believe that it is in major industrial scenarios that they will take off first. This is not a shocking prediction given that this is where they currently enjoy their greatest successes, but I am referring to more autonomous robots than those which currently paint cars and so on. For instance, large earthmoving projects could be carried out with little to no human intervention simply because the problem domain is so simple. Through use of a combination of sensors (including visual/optical, radar, sonar, lidar, and others) a sophisticated map of geometry can be built. If you're not moving very quickly, this can be done with sufficient accuracy using current technology to carry out moderately complicated tasks.
I envision a cluster of wirelessly networked systems which will share computing time with one another when they have cycles to spare, working together to carry out such a project. The sum of the data from stress analyses, efficiency plans, and so on would be combined to carry out tasks as rapidly as possible. Ultimately, people will be able to focus on management tasks rather than laboring.
The question posed, then, is what do we do with all the people who will soon be unemployed by robots? Aside from forming labor unions and legislating inefficiency, what is the solution? I cannot picture any true capitalism managing to care for people displaced by robots, which will only happen with increasing regularity as robotics becomes a better-solved problem. It's bad enough when the jobs leave your country, but only the corporations (and of course the consumers - but they have to have jobs in order to consume!) benefit when the jobs go to robots.
Re:Nice to see the technology is catching up... (Score:2)
Not saying that's the best solution, but it is A solution - to show that fu
Re:Nice to see the technology is catching up... (Score:1)
--
Re:Nice to see the technology is catching up... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Nice to see the technology is catching up... (Score:1)
Re:Nice to see the technology is catching up... (Score:1)
No, tech creates and destroys jobs. (Score:1)
A little bit too much of a rosy scenario - some techs create more jobs than they destroy, some don't.
Re:Nice to see the technology is catching up... (Score:2)
The cost of labor in other areas will drop as the labor force is retrained to work in these other areas. For example, maybe they'll be retrained
PLAGIARIST (Score:1, Informative)
"the man with the pla" is a common troll.
Re:Nice to see the technology is catching up... (Score:1)
there are luddites among us (Score:1, Insightful)
Plagiarism! (Score:4, Informative)
Wrong.... (Score:2)
Justice for the little bots (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Justice for the little bots (Score:2)
You don't want to win this contest (Score:2, Funny)
Just like WWF (Score:5, Funny)
The World Wildlife Federation has robots? (Score:1)
This is good... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Free AI Minds for Better, Smarter Contest-Robot (Score:2, Funny)
Deja vu for a RW competitor (Score:5, Informative)
I appreciate that the DARPA teams are working in a different ballpark from your average garden shed RW team. But the same basic economic rules apply and looking at the web site the sense of deja vu is increased. If they've got these sponsors then power to them but yet again the www site is a little sparse on the subject. You need more than just a shared sense of rejection to make a business model.
If you don't have your own machine shop ... (Score:5, Interesting)
But what do I know -- my car could barely make it around the track without running into the wall.
Re:If you don't have your own machine shop ... (Score:3, Informative)
cues taken from 1989 game: Omega (Score:1)
Quite an odd tone in this story (Score:1)
In reality what this group is doing is exactly what should happen in our free society. Especially in this case where the government primed the pump in promoting science and an independant group comes in to provide more promotion of science.
Why the reaction of surprise? A project like this is most certainly something to be expected and welcomed.
The real issues Grand Challenge competitors face (Score:5, Informative)
The selection process wasn't hard for anyone who had a clue. DARPA was evaluating papers for months, and you could resubmit as many times as you wanted. DARPA warned entrants in the rules that it might take several turnarounds to get a paper through. The people whining about rejection submitted papers at the last minute.
We'll be in Fontana in March.
John Nagle
Team Overbot
Government funding issue (Score:1)
I'm curious --- why is it a big issue to have government funidng? Presumably the problem is the combination of government funding + proprietary? Off-hand, I would think that DARPA would like to see government-funded work used in the competition, because it would confirm that the work they were funding was good. On the other hand, there's always the danger that it would confirm that the work was no good, but they should be willing to face that too.
After all, the mission of DARPA is to support good resear
Padding the big-3s pockets (Score:4, Insightful)
1. Announce a nice, big, open competition for ideas, welcome everyone.
2. Get everyone's papers and technical submissions for free.
3. Suddenly, cut the field to 25 well-qualified, well-financed groups. Forget you welcomed everyone.
4. Change the specifications to include some of the more innovative ideas you got, for free, from the small groups you exclude.
5. Run your "competition" touting how fair it is.
6. In the end, award the contract to Raytheon, Boeing, Lockeed. Pay them three times what the small contractor would have charged.
7. Lather, rinse, repeat.
The reason we don't innovate anymore in this country is because true innovation comes from free-thinkers. Darpa and the DOD don't get that anymore, and rely on the same old staid companies to do everything. They'll get a RC vehicle with half the capabilities they originally hoped for at three times the price. Who needs innovation? Just keep feeding the defense-contract monster.
Re:Padding the big-3s pockets (Score:1)
One small error...Raytheon is #4. And, you forgot #3, Northrop Grumman.
I've worked on DARPA projects, for one of the above companies...those folks are SO fickle it's rediculous. There's no need for any conspiracy as these companies are virtually guaranteed contracts because of political influence. Weather or not you think that's a bad thing, it seems to have worked well enough to keep us from getting the shit kicked out of us so far.
Get Back To Work... DOD Needs You(r money)! (Score:1)
Wait a minute. Don't jump to conclusions. (Score:2, Interesting)
Perhaps this complaining from the small teams is just a case of sour grapes? Perhaps they didn't have a solid plan or any sort of progress and really had no chance to win?
That isn't a flame, I honestly don't know. I just know that there is at least 1 unfunded (well, pe
Re:Wait a minute. Don't jump to conclusions. (Score:2)
The complaints seem to be that mnny teams had been promised funding conditional on being accepted, and that the initial position seemed to be that there was plenty of scope to submit a far out idea and have it accepted. Now DARPA only want "serious" competitors, i.e. people telling them what they already know. That's idiotic; the idea of this challenge is for people to demonstrate unproven ideas.
Now that DARPA have turned it into a GPS waypoint challenge, it seems fairly clear that they've already got e
Terminator (Score:1)
Re:Terminator (Score:1, Funny)
Anybody want to take a stab at it?
You're posting a RFQ for a joke on Slashdot? That's lazy man.
Old standard (Score:1)
DARPA (Score:1)
Robot Earthmovers (Score:1)
Re:A Real Change (Score:1)
Re:A Real Change (Score:1)
Yes, it most likely will. However, is this neccesarily a bad thing? Would you like to manning the convoy crossing enemy territory, or would you rather have a bot do it? Would you like to lead the spearhead, or would you rather have the autonomous tank do it? Personally the less likely I am to die in a battle, the happier I am.
Re:A Real Change (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:A Real Change (Score:2)
Disclaimer: not meant to refer to the parent poster personally.
Re:A Real Change (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:A Real Change (Score:1, Funny)
Thanks, no. I don't need any more fucking brats running amok, unsupervised, and screwing with me, my family, or my friends; ruining our otherwise-pleasant outings with their inattentive/non-existant "parents" (for exceptionally loose values of the word "parent") not teaching them right from wrong and how to behave/interact in a civilized society.
Now, if you wa
Repost (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Repost (Score:1)
Re:Join Team Overbot - no pay, some risk, big priz (Score:5, Interesting)
In addition, the parent is a brand-new account, with an already rich posting history of highly-moderated comments, [slashdot.org] some of which are reposted from older articles.
Also, if you carefully read between the lines, you will notice the posts by this user bear a striking resembelance to those of Sir Haxalot [slashdot.org], Pingular [slashdot.org], and Steve 'Rim' Jobs [slashdot.org], all of which are accounts created by the same user for the purposes of karma-whoring and building up large amounts of karma very quickly in an effor to use this to his advantage while trolling.
Please moderate his post down so this trolling karma-whore will not be able to annoy others and carefully work the system. If you fear the wrath of Meta-mod, you can always rate him as "Overrated" which gives negative karma but does not go to M2.
This has been a public service announcement from a helpful Slashdot user. Posted anonymously to avoid the groupthink.
Re:Join Team Overbot - no pay, some risk, big priz (Score:3, Interesting)
Both myself, along with every member of their team were shocked that DARPA accepted them. They are not on good financial footing at all. For their budget, they need approximately $250,000 (With 4 zeros); however, they know that there are many teams with budgets in excess of 3 and 4 million dollars.
They are looking actively for donations, but have not seen much come to them. They
Re:Join Team Overbot - no pay, some risk, big priz (Score:1)
A note by the real author of this (Score:2)
John Nagle
Re:Join Team Overbot - no pay, some risk, big priz (Score:2)
That said, it seems I metamod far more than I moderate (I rarely get mod points anymore), so presumably most other metamods aren't so careful.
Who chooses metamods again?
Re:My Robot Owns Yours (Score:1)
This is very much of what's wrong with world today. You can't expect anything if not explicitly stated so.
It might sound fair that in an election process to a competition you would be treated exactly like your competitors. But why? Why would you if it was not explicitly stated that the election process is equal/well-matched (which is the proper term?).
This applies to so many aspects nowadays.
Just think...
How many times you were screwed around in the past year becaus
Re:My Robot Owns Yours (Score:1)
I just succumbed from raging-lunatic-with-better-than-all-of-thou-attit
Python... (Score:1)
Re:Al Gore invented the Robot (Score:1, Interesting)
Mod parent down - forged post (Score:2)
I am the author of the original post, which some bozo has copied and reprinted under another name.
John Nagle