DARPA Network Challenge Lasts All of 9 Hours 129
stillnotelf writes "A team based at MIT has won the DARPA Network Challenge. DARPA notes: 'The Challenge has captured the imagination of people around the world, is rich with scientific intrigue, and, we hope, is part of a growing "renaissance of wonder" throughout the nation,' said DARPA's director, Dr. Regina E. Dugan. 'DARPA salutes the MIT team for successfully completing this complex task less than 9 hours after balloon launch.' PDF with (scant) details. Hit the first link above for a map with the locations. How many did your team find?"
Re:That was pretty fast... (Score:5, Informative)
Team Nerdfighter found 9/10 balloons
http://twitter.com/hankgreen/status/6392128271 [twitter.com]
Re:That was pretty fast... (Score:5, Informative)
DARPA is an acronym standing for Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.
It is an agency of the US Department of Defense it develops tech for the army.
It's predecessor ARPA gave us the internet amongst other things(too condensed a statement).
They like to issue challenges and geeks of all trades either like to participate in them for the sport and/or are picked from the crowd and given jobs at DARPA to develop new cutting edge technologies.
Re:how (Score:5, Informative)
Well reading the previous article [slashdot.org] about MITs solution to this challenge would be a good start.
Re:Great, but (Score:5, Informative)
Here's the answer [cnet.com]. I was wondering the same thing myself. It appears that the solution was very low tech: just get a bunch of people, and when they see a balloon, send a message to the group. Instead of splitting the 40k among the group, they donated it to charity. Reward for MIT? Bragging rights.
Re:That was pretty fast... (Score:2, Informative)
At the moment, the grandparent post is showing 1 positive moderation and no negative moderation...
Re:What's DARPA about it ? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:UPS (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Why this challenge? (Score:2, Informative)
Um... WHAT?!
If the US want to censor twitter or facebook, they can just shut them down...
People got around this in iran by using anonymous proxies to tunnel requests to websites outside of their government's control... US citizens could do the same thing in such circumstances (using studivz or something more obscure if the conspiracy stretches that far)
And I think if we're talking about DARPA attempting to find some algorithm to silently censor certain posts about US unrest, unless they manage to completely disconnect a region from the outside world with nobody noticing, I think there would be a fairly large outcry. Tibet managed to get word out, I'm sure an american state could do the same...
Re:Thanks (Score:3, Informative)