Tuesday, October 30, 2007

DARPA Grand Challenge - Unmanned Vehicles Update

A while back I wrote on the topic of Unmanned Vehicles (UAV)where the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA)was planning the organization of its third Urban Challenge designed to encourage the best minds in the world to meet Congress' requirement that one-third of all military vehicles be unmanned by 2015.

The challenge date is upon us and now 35 teams of elite robot experts are on their way to Victorville in hopes of finding a pattern when it comes to driving cars which will save hundreds, if not millions of live claimed to automobile accidents each year.

The prize is $2 million, a fractional sum when it comes to saving lives.The military of course is putting out the award money in hopes to keep its people out of the path of an improvised explosive device.

In the long run, the hopes is that these robots could drive humans around or at least take over on an "auto pilot" way when we are too tired or just partied a little too much, for example.

In two days, this Thursday, DARPA will announce the names of the 20 teams that have made it past the first phase and will go on to compete in the finals Saturday. The final event is open to the public from 6:30 a.m. to noon. For more information, visit the DARPA challenge Web site.

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Friday, October 19, 2007

Lightweight UAV Plane on Hydrogen

It seems that everyday I hear "we've gone green" over here and the "we are greener" over there. I just haven't gotten the full concept of going green. Maybe is because I know that recycling paper causes more damage than normal paper due to the chemicals involved, or maybe I'm just not that caring when it comes to the environment unless there is added value for me.

.unmanned planeThis is the prime example of a story I read today, where the benefits is the green factor, not necessarily what the product was intended for. Here is the excerpt:

"Researchers at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) have just developed a small unmanned plane that uses 500 grams of liquefied hydrogen to power whopping 10-hour flights."

The bottom line here is that these researchers are looking for ways to increase flight time through other fuel sources. The "green benefit" is less carbon dioxide, but they don't lead off with all the green marketing hype. Yes, we should care about our planet and consume less resources, however, less not forget the prime directive. Create unmanned aerial vehicles which can save lives, aid is in the fight against terrorism, and place our troops out of harms way

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