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(Some Guy)   Standford wins DARPA grand challenge 2005, in other news Duke still sucks   (stanfordracing.org) divider line 69
    More: Spiffy  
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7360 clicks; posted to Main » on 09 Oct 2005 at 4:40 AM   |  Favorite    |   share:  Share on Twitter share via Email Share on Facebook   more»



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2005-10-08 10:01:38 PM
Who/what is this "Standford" that submitter makes reference to?

just sayin'
 
2005-10-09 04:47:06 AM
Well, damn.

/I'm from CMU
 
2005-10-09 04:50:48 AM
"September 22, 2005: The Stanford Racing Team is happy to announce that Red Bull is a new primary supporter."

Well isn't that cheating? It's supposed to negotiate terrain, not grow wings and fly over it!
 
2005-10-09 04:50:55 AM
Looks like Doom Buggy didn't make it too far. Not bad for High School kids though.
 
2005-10-09 04:51:45 AM
Is the d for dumbass?
 
Ni
2005-10-09 04:56:56 AM
Grats stan(d)ford!

This news hit Fark before it hit your own site!
 
2005-10-09 05:03:13 AM
Com'on wheres the vids??
 
2005-10-09 05:05:35 AM
I think he meant "Standford winds DdARPA gradnd challendge 200d5 idn odther dnews, Dudke stidll sducks"

/Godt nodthing
 
2005-10-09 05:06:18 AM
I work for (d)...

/yes, as a matter of fact, I am an idiot
 
2005-10-09 05:12:12 AM
I think this headline warrants a Sarah Connor reference.

DARPA is all about autonomous things. I had a professor who worked for them that was working on walking robots for urban warfare, finding Sarah Connor.
 
2005-10-09 05:13:21 AM
Looks like those south bay kids gave everyone else a good case of the old bleeding cock socket...
 
2005-10-09 05:18:20 AM
Real-time race results here (pops).

Way cool that four different bots (so far) finished. Someone at Red Bull just got a raise for making the last minute decision to sponsor them... Nice.
 
2005-10-09 05:19:33 AM
Whoo!

 
2005-10-09 05:19:36 AM
Standford

"I mean, obviously, he went to Stanford."
 
2005-10-09 05:22:02 AM
I work for DARPA.

So I am really getting a kick out of most of these replies.

Some of you guys are very good at making it sound like you know what you are talking about.

But trust me.... You don't.

I think you just want to make yourself sound smart, when in reality you dont know what you are talking about.

This is how bad info gets passed around.

If you dont know about the topic....Dont make yourself sound like you do.

Cuz some Farkers belive anything they hear.
 
2005-10-09 05:23:29 AM
Someone please ban jacobjeri immediately.
 
2005-10-09 05:24:42 AM
What?
 
2005-10-09 05:25:43 AM
Hey, look on the bright side. An article posted about robotics and not one sign of a search for Sarah Connor, or a robotic dog wanting motor oil or anything.
 
2005-10-09 05:27:51 AM
I work for STFU.

So I am really going to kick the stuffing out of you.

Some of your post made it sound like you aren't a disgruntled twit in a cube.

But trust me... You are.

I think you just want to make everyone else sound stupid, when in reality you haven't been laid in months.

This is how bad Juju gets started.

If you're a balding dweeb in a cubicle....Don't spank it during office hours.

Cuz some farkers have aggravated cock sockets.
 
2005-10-09 05:31:32 AM
How'd Sitford do in the challenge? I heard they were ranked pretty highly, and their rivalry with Loungeford is well known to all!
 
2005-10-09 05:33:01 AM
These are not the droids you're looking for


No way, I used to work for S.T.F.U. too!

Who are you gonna kick the stuffing out of?
 
2005-10-09 05:35:54 AM
jacobjeri


Way way, I used to play S.T.F.U. with your mother!

How's that stuffing taste now, biatch?
 
2005-10-09 05:47:47 AM
These are...droids...etc

Tastes damn fine actually.

You're like umm
'down with it right' ? I mean 'Down with me working at DARPA" and stuff.

You get teh funny part right??

Yes. No.

?
 
2005-10-09 05:48:24 AM
MYTH: Columbus set out to prove the earth was round.

FACT: At the end of the 15th Century, most everyone knew the
earth was a sphere. What was in question, however, was the size
of the earth--its circumference. Columbus underestimated the
size of the earth by one-fourth.

MYTH: Queen Isabella sold the crown jewels to pay for Columbus'
voyage.

FACT: The queen may have suggested this at some point, but her
financial advisers assured her that there were other ways to
finance the enterprise. One way was to make the city of Palos
pay back a debt to the crown by providing two of the ships.
Another way was to get Italian financial backing for part of the
expenses. The crown had to put up very little money from the
treasury.

MYTH: The crew of the three ships on the voyage of discovery was
made up mainly of criminals and nare-do-goods.

FACT: The crew was primarily comprised of seasoned sailors from
the towns of Palos and Moguer, Spain, thanks to the efforts of
the Pinzon brothers. Just in case Columbus might have had
trouble attracting a crew, the crown did offer amnesty to
criminals. However, only four criminals were on board: one a
convicted murderer (he killed a man in a quarrel); the other
three, accused of freeing him from prison.

MYTH: The initial voyage from Spain to the new world was
perilous--fraught with bad weather and lack of food. Several
sailors died on the way.

FACT: No one died on the maiden voyage. There was enough food
aboard for one year. The weather was almost ideal--no storms
were encountered. However, on the return trip to Spain there was
a major hurricane which almost destroyed the two remaining ships.

MYTH: There was a priest on board the Santa Maria in 1492.

FACT: There were no friars or priests on the first voyage in
1492, despite Columbus' deep religious fervor. Many of the
paintings of the first landfall in the new world on San Salvador
show a priest with Columbus--contrary to the facts. There were
five priests on the second voyage: Benedictine Father Buil; the
Jeronymite Father Ramon Pane; and three Franciscans.
MYTH: Several hundred sailors were aboard the three caravels on
the initial voyage in 1492. The ships were relatively large for
the anticipated long journey on an unpredictable sea.

FACT: Only 90 men made the first voyage of discovery. The ships
were quite tiny by modern standards--no longer than a tennis
court, and less than 30 feet wide. The Santa Maria had 40 men
aboard, the Pinta, 26, and the Ni$a, 24. Only the Ni$a and the
Pinta returned to Spain, as the Santa Maria was shipwrecked on
Christmas Day, 1492. 39 men volunteered to stay behind at the
fortress called "La Navidad" on the northern coast of present-day
Haiti (they all perished at the hands of the Indians prior to the
return of Columbus the following year).

MYTH: There is no doubt that Columbus was of Italian descent.

FACT: Much controversy surrounds the origins of Columbus. Some
say he was a "converso"--a converted Jew. Others say he was born
on Corsica, and there is even a theory that traces him to Viking
ancestors. The prevailing theory is that he was a Genoese, born
and raised in that seaport city in what is now Italy.

MYTH: Columbus suffered from syphilis and probably died from it.

FACT: Columbus suffered in later life from a form of gout--an
arthritic condition in his joints caused by the rigors of the
sea. His eyesight was also declining. While syphilis was
introduced into Europe after 1492, probably by the Indians
Columbus brought back to Spain or by the sailors who had contact
with them in the new world, Columbus was not infected by it.

MYTH: Columbus died a pauper, in chains, in a Spanish prison.

FACT: Despite the fact that the Spanish crown retracted some of
the privileges promised to Columbus, he was a relatively rich man
at the time of his death. Although he returned to Spain in
chains in 1500 after his third voyage, the King and Queen
apologized for the misunderstanding and had them removed.
Columbus died quietly at the age of 55 in Valladolid, Spain, on
May 20, 1506 in his own apartment attended by family and friends.

MYTH: Columbus is buried in Santo Domingo, the Dominican
Republic.

FACT: There is much controversy surrounding the whereabouts of
the remains of Columbus. There are records of the transferral of
his remains on different occasions, so that it is possible that
parts of his remains are in several locations. The prevailing
belief, however, is that his primary burial place is in the
Cathedral of Seville, Spain, with some of his bones or ashes in
Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, and some in Genoa, Italy. At
one time they were in Cuba.

MYTH: Columbus set foot on North American soil at some point now
a part of mainland United States.

FACT: Columbus never saw North America. His first landfall was
in the Bahamas, probably the current San Salvador (Watlings
Island), although even this is disputed (Samana Cay, an island 65
miles south of San Salvador is a strong contender). There are
proponents for seven other possible island landing sites. The
only current U.S. territories either sighted or visited by
Columbus are the U.S. Virgin Islands, which Columbus named on his
second voyage, and Puerto Rico. While in anchor of St. Croix
(USVI) on November 14, 1493, some of Columbus' crew experienced
the first hostile encounter with the Indians. Five days later he
landed at San Juan Bautista, now Puerto Rico. Later he would
visit the northeastern tip of South America and the eastern coast
of Central America, but never mainland U.S.A. The fact is that
Columbus never admitted that he had discovered a new continent.

SOME OTHER INTERESTING FACTS

WOMEN were not on the first or second voyages of Columbus. The
first women colonists appeared in 1498, when Columbus was allowed
to recruit one woman for every ten emigrants on the third voyage.

HORSES were introduced to the new world by Columbus on his second
voyage.

SEVENTEEN SHIPS and over twelve-hundred men made up "The Grand
Fleet" of the second voyage in 1493.

TOBACCO was introduced into Europe because of Columbus' discovery
of its use by the Indians.

CELESTIAL PHENOMENA were observed by Columbus on several of his
voyages. He observed a "marvelous branch of fire" that fell into
the sea (a meteor or a comet?) in 1492 on his first voyage.
There is a record of a 280-pound meteorite which landed near the
Alsatian town of Ensisheim and seen by the German King Maximilian
in 1492. There was a total eclipse of the moon on September 14,
1494 (second voyage), which Columbus used to clarify his position
(erroneously) near Asia. On the fourth voyage Columbus used his
foreknowledge of a total eclipse of the moon on February 29,
1504, to convince the Indians of his supernatural powers.

OK, so I've been drinking;. Burt ai q2gR> tjat is, so whaT? it'srill a go0d linlk :=-) or hwateverf....
 
2005-10-09 05:51:33 AM
The link said they are waiting to play, not they had won.

I rather doubt anybody will win this year either.

But I hope Stanford or the like proves me wrong!
 
2005-10-09 05:52:59 AM
jaco...ff...juice...etc

That's what your mom said about her Dirty Sanchez.

You're like erm
'totally clueless with women right' ? I mean 'Virgin down in the basement" and stuff.

You are teh funni part, geek!!

No. Yes.

cock socket!
 
2005-10-09 05:57:13 AM
This may be the first time that 'Duke Sucks' made me laugh.
HA HA!
 
2005-10-09 06:12:32 AM
These are not the droids you're looking for
HUh?


Go back a few posts and see where this all started.


***kr0m0z0ne

No, you don't want to ban me.
Someone, Anyone...
Help the nonBelievers understand
 
2005-10-09 06:22:11 AM
jacobjeri - Guess what, buddy? You just entered the state of Arkans-clueless. Population: You, bro.

Your unoriginal Canadian trifles bore me. I'm off to get some sweet loving from Palmela Handerson before I meet up with Prince Valium for a late rendezvous...

Sleep well, and cheer up, snookums; Even a pariah can become Mariah. Or is that a redundant conundrum?
 
2005-10-09 06:26:08 AM
And one last thing before I forget:







You're a cock socket!

Nyuk, nyuk, nyuk! Hey Moe, watchme pull a dickweed outta my hat!
 
2005-10-09 06:49:21 AM
The status board on the grandchallenge site has the latest score. It shows that 4 teams have already finished, with Stanford Racing Team winning with a time of 9h 55m, 4 minutes ahead of the second place "Red Team". All the other teams have been eliminated, except for "Team TerraMax", but they've already taken 18h 50m so they're not going to effect the outcome.
 
2005-10-09 07:55:33 AM
Isn't over 9 hours a little long to travel 132 miles?
 
2005-10-09 08:18:50 AM
I recall that in order to qualify for the $2M prize, the winner had to average @ 17 mph. None of the top 4 finishers appear to have done that, but at least some entrants finished this year.

And, of the 4 finishers, Duke was part of teams 'Red' and 'Red Too.' I think jonasborg noticed that, as well.
 
2005-10-09 08:19:20 AM
Ethernet76: Isn't over 9 hours a little long to travel 132 miles?

Yes, if the vehicle in queston has a driver, and is on paved roads. That's an average speed of about 15 MPH. (With liberal rounding)

However, these are driverless vehicles traversing a difficult offroad course ... I'd say that 9 hours is pretty impressive.
 
2005-10-09 08:19:44 AM
ethernet76: Isn't over 9 hours a little long to travel 132 miles?

For a car driven by a human traveling on a highway, yes.

For a car driven by a computer traveling in a Department of Defense-designed obstacle course in the middle of the desert, no.
 
2005-10-09 08:20:20 AM
D'oh!
 
2005-10-09 08:21:44 AM
farkoblanco: I recall that in order to qualify for the $2M prize, the winner had to average 17 mph. None of the top 4 finishers appear to have done that, but at least some entrants finished this year.

No, the winning team gets the money. There was no average speed requirement.
 
2005-10-09 08:22:50 AM
Angel of Death: No, the winning team gets the money. There was no average speed requirement.

I lied. They had to do it in under 10 hours.

/bedtime now
 
2005-10-09 08:53:44 AM
Got to see Stanley briefly wandering around the desert not too long ago. They did some testing at the Volkswagen test track here in AZ.

From all accounts, they were pretty much convinced that they would complete the course this year. That in itself is a huge feat. I believe the furthest anyone had ever made it before was somewhere around 7 miles. Good job Stanley!
 
2005-10-09 08:58:05 AM
And in other news, "Duke sucks" still isn't the least bit funny.
 
2005-10-09 09:06:20 AM
The status board on the grandchallenge site has the latest score. It shows that 4 teams have already finished, with Stanford Racing Team winning with a time of 9h 55m, 4 minutes ahead of the second place "Red Team".

I think Stanford and both CMU vehicles actually came in at around 8hrs, within a few minutes of each other. For some reason the status board clock was still running even after it showed the vehicles had finished. And it sounds like they took a safety pause for the night so they could let the last team finish in the morning.
 
2005-10-09 09:12:28 AM
Triaxis: And in other news, "Duke sucks" still isn't the least bit funny.

The truth doesn't need to be funny.
 
2005-10-09 09:42:22 AM
Actually; Stanford and the CMU teams finished the course at about 7.5 hours. However, during the race many cars were 'paused' for various reasons (TerraMax's chase vehicle broke down, and they paused until the problem was fixed), so the actual race time will be somewhat less than the total traveling time for those that finish. According to this account:


http://www.tgdaily.com/2005/10/08/darpagrandchallenge2005/


TerraMax might actually still be in the running because it was paused for a very long time.

Also according to the site, CMU and Stanford finished extremely close to one another; within five minutes. They're crawling through sensor logs to determine the winner.
 
2005-10-09 09:53:42 AM
cornpone: You got it, I was just going to come in and say the same thing. There is no official winner yet, and due to all the pausing it looks like it may not be Stanford.
 
2005-10-09 10:01:43 AM
I was just looking at the Stanford sponsor list on grandchallenge.org. Volkswagon of America Electronic Research Lab, Mohr Davidow Ventures, Android, Red Bull, Intel, Honeywell, Tyzx, Coverity Inc. Where's the Cyberdyne Systems Corporation?
 
2005-10-09 10:14:12 AM
We all know that Sebastian just left CMU and Mike as well, so this is basically another team from CMU. ...yeah, this sucks!



Clicky for BBC news


go Red!
 
2005-10-09 10:16:29 AM
 
2005-10-09 10:28:59 AM


Unavailable for Comment.

/thought someone would have posted this by now
 
2005-10-09 10:34:04 AM
DARPA mohammed jihad
 
2005-10-09 10:40:36 AM
wow, congrats to everyone who finished! that's truly a remarkable feat. personally, I think DARPA should give everyone who finished a decent amount of cash.

Anyone know if the $2 mil is in the form of a grant or a cash prize for the researchers? Because if it's a grant, $2 mil is nothing. DARPA gives those out like candy.
 
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