As a computer science grad, this news is very good. Those guys work extremely hard and produce great results. It's also alot of good publicity for the department.
GREAT JOB!
As a computer science grad, this news is very good. Those guys work extremely hard and produce great results. It's also alot of good publicity for the department.
GREAT JOB!
Can they make me a bot that fetches me a beer when I don't feel like getting up?
What kind of bot would you make?
LOUISIANA — Team CajunBot got the word Thursday it will be headed to California in October for the next leg of the Urban Challenge competition.
The competition is held by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency as a way to spur development of autonomous vehicles for military use.
Team CajunBot consists mostly of University of Louisiana at Lafayette students.
The previous two challenges — in which Team CajunBot has also competed — were held in the desert.
This year, the challenge will be held in an urban environment in order to simulate the type of terrain American forces will encounter overseas.
Team CajunBot is one of only 36 teams — out of an original 89 — that have made the cut. DARPA officials have watched each team put its vehicle through tests in order to make cuts.
Other teams are a mix of universities, private companies or public-private teams.
The rest of the story
By KEVIN BLANCHARD
Advocate Acadiana bureau
The Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has winnowed down the list of competitors in its upcoming Urban Challenge to 36 teams. And it’s no surprise that many of those squads hail from universities that performed well in 2005’s Grand Challenge, Darpa’s pioneering robot race.
Stanford University took top honors in the 2005 competition, edging out two self-driving vehicles from Carnegie Mellon University in a tense trek through the Mojave Desert. Those two institutions could be on track to square off again: Both have had vehicles selected as semifinalists in this year’s race, which will take place in November on a decommissioned Air Force base in California.
Darpa officials chose the semifinalists after visiting more than 50 teams from across the country. The squads that made the cut — which also include robotics groups from Cornell University, the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, among others — will compete in time trials just a week before the main event. The quickest 20 robots will then get a chance to compete for a prize pool worth $3.5-million. —Brock Read
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency named 36 semi-finalists in its renowned robot race, the DARPA Urban Challenge. The race pits self-driving vehicles designed by some of the country's top computer science students against each other along a grueling physical course.
DARPA officials chose semifinalists from a list of 50 teams from across the country. University teams that made the cut included Stanford and Carnegie Mellon--2005's first and second finishers respectively--as well as Cornell University, the University of Louisiana and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
The rest of the story
By Paul McCloskey
Campus Technology
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