We're a bit torn when we arrive at the Boulder Reservoir, past all
the chain-linked signs warning of "potential danger ahead." The
organizers of the Autonomous Vehicle Competition are running two
separate tracks -- land and air -- and frankly, we don't have the
resources to cover both. As the competitors scramble to complete
last-minute repairs in the Team Pits area, we approach an employee in a
red SparkFun
T-shirt, to suss out the best plan of attack. "A lot of the aerial
vehicles tend to fail in the first round," she answers, without much
deliberation, "so it's probably best to start there." The organizers
would've been hard-pressed to have constructed a more beautiful Colorado
spring day, as "Come Fly With Me" wafts over the PA while spectators
settle into the bleachers and competitors find spots at the edge of the
gravel pit.
Thirty teams will compete for the $1,000 aerial grand prize. The
task: taking off autonomously, staying within the allowed fly zone,
dropping a tennis ball onto a thin sliver of land inside the reservoir,
ducking beneath a goalpost-like wicket and landing on the same surface
from where it took off -- and, as the name implies, all this must be
done via a pre-programmed set of instructions without external control.
The takeoff, it seems, is the hardest, as the first several competitors
are knocked out of the contest, failing to launch in all sorts of
spectacular fashions, including fixed-wing aircraft that just can't seem
find their way into the clear Colorado sky, sliding along the gravel or
twitching mechanically atop the PVC launchpad. When a quadcopter
finally manages to lift off successfully, there's an audible sigh of
relief amongst the crowd, followed by explosive applause. When it works,
it's magic.
Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/06/18/autonomous-vehicle-competition/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget
On the sidelines of SparkFun's Autonomous Vehicle Competition
Written By Unknown on June 19, 2013 | 6/19/2013
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