Google-Owned SCHAFT Robot Won DARPA Robotics Challenge

December 22nd, 2013

Via: Slashgear:

The Google-owned Japanese robotics company SCHAFT has won the DARPA Robotics Challenge Trials by a wide margin. It scored 27 out of 32 points, beating its nearest competitor IHMC Robotics by seven points. Coming up third was Tartan rescue with 18 points, and MIT following that with 16 points.

The contest took place Dec. 20-21 at the Homestead-Miami Speedway, where 16 teams from around the world did their best to guide their robots through a series of tasks. The robots were to be programmed in such a way that they could be guided by simple commands issued by a non-expert, e.g., “Open the door” or “Clear away the debris in front of you.”

The object of the challenge, DARPA says, was to create a robot that could stand in for humans in disaster and emergency zones. In all, eight tasks were included: drive a vehicle; walk across rubble; remove debris; open a door and walk through it; climb a ladder and cross an industrial walkway; break a concrete panel with a tool made for humans; find and close a valve; and connect a fire hose to a pipe and open the valve.

One Response to “Google-Owned SCHAFT Robot Won DARPA Robotics Challenge”

  1. dale says:

    Damn, that’s flat out incredible. DARPA (challenges included) continues to simultaneously frighten and amaze. When I was a kid I thought robots were the holy grail. I wonder what native Americans thought about the first arriving ships?

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