Wish they did that when I was President of the Carnegie Tech Radio Club
w3hxf at cox.net
w3hxf at cox.net
Mon Jun 8 07:35:48 CDT 2015
Wish they did that when I was President of the Carnegie Tech Radio Club.
Their previous robot went to Chernoble, in the USSR.
See you thursday.
73, Bill, W3HXF
Earning the $500,000 prize, is Tartan Rescue of Pittsburgh, and its robot CHIMP.
Tartan Rescue's robot CHIMP from CMU
Robots from Republic of Korea and United States take home $3.5 million in prizes
"May the best robot win" has been a frequently uttered phrase throughout the DARPA Robotics Challenge Finals,
held this Friday and Saturday at the Fairplex in Pomona, California. After years of research and development,
several intense days of preparation at the competition site, a day of rehearsal and two full days of head-to-
head competition in front of thousands of spectators, the verdict is in.
Taking first place and the $2 million in prize money that goes with it is Team Kaist of Daejeon, Republic of
Korea, and its robot DRC-Hubo. Coming in second and taking home $1 million is Team IHMC Robotics of Pensacola,
Fla., and its robot Running Man. The third place finisher, earning the $500,000 prize, is Tartan Rescue of
Pittsburgh, and its robot CHIMP.
DARPA program manager and DRC organizer Gill Pratt congratulated all 23 participating teams and thanked them
for helping to open a new era of partnership between robots and humans.
"These robots are big and made of lots of metal and you might assume people seeing them would be filled with
fear and anxiety," Pratt said. "But we heard groans of sympathy when those robots fell. And what did people do
every time a robot scored a point? They cheered! It's an extraordinary thing, and I think this is one of the
biggest lessons from DRC—the potential for robots not only to perform technical tasks for us, but to help
connect people to one another."
Launched in response to a humanitarian need that became glaringly clear during the nuclear disaster at
Fukushima, Japan, in 2011, the DARPA Robotics Challenge consisted of three increasingly demanding competitions
over two years. The goal was to accelerate progress in robotics and hasten the day when robots have sufficient
dexterity and robustness to enter areas too dangerous for humans and mitigate the impacts of natural or man-
made disasters.
The DRC Finals competition challenged participating robotics teams and their robots to complete a difficult
course of eight tasks relevant to disaster response, among them driving alone, walking through rubble, tripping
circuit breakers, turning valves and climbing stairs. A dozen teams from the United States and another eleven
from Japan, Germany, Italy, Republic of Korea and Hong Kong competed in the outdoor competition.
"This is the end of the DARPA Robotics Challenge but only the beginning of a future in which robots can work
alongside people to reduce the toll of disasters," said DARPA Director Arati Prabhakar. "I am so proud of all
the teams that participated and know that the community that the DRC has helped to catalyze will do great
things in the years ahead."
.
DRC FINALS TEAM STANDINGS
TEAM SCORE TIME
TEAM KAIST 8 44:28
TEAM IHMC ROBOTICS 8 50:26
TARTAN RESCUE 8 55:15
TEAM NIMBRO RESCUE 7 34:00
TEAM ROBOSIMIAN 7 47:59
TEAM MIT 7 50:25
TEAM WPI-CMU 7 56:06
TEAM DRC-HUBO AT UNLV 6 57:41
TEAM TRAC LABS 5 49:00
TEAM AIST-NEDO 5 52:30
TEAM NEDO-JSK 4 58:39
TEAM SNU 4 59:33
TEAM THOR 3 27:47
TEAM HRP2-TOKYO 3 30:06
TEAM ROBOTIS 3 30:23
TEAM VIGIR 3 48:49
TEAM WALK-MAN 2 36:35
TEAM TROOPER 2 42:32
TEAM HECTOR 1 02:44
TEAM VALOR 0 00:00
TEAM AERO 0 00:00
TEAM GRIT 0 00:00
TEAM HKU 0 00:00
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