Early bird prices are coming to an end soon... ⏰ Grab your tickets before January 17

This article was published on January 12, 2018

Forget F1 and NASCAR: Robot racing is your new favorite sport


Forget F1 and NASCAR: Robot racing is your new favorite sport

Who else can’t wait for level 5 autonomous vehicles to race at breakneck speeds through public streets? Just me?

What is it?

Roborace is a racing and development platform for autonomous race cars. It’s essentially a set of guidelines and hardware specifications that companies can develop AI for. According to the company:

Roborace’s open A.I. platform allows companies to develop their own driverless software and push the limits in an extreme and safe environment. The series is designed to be a competition of intelligence so all teams will use the same “Robocar” to ensure all efforts will be focused on advancing the software for everyday road cars to adopt.

You’ll notice several different appearances: the “Devbot” version of “Robocar” has a canopy that can house a human driver. This is for developmental purposes in order to obtain accurate comparisons. Plus it looks less like a Gillette razor with its canopy if you ask us.

Why does it matter?

Nvidia is decidedly amped about Roborace. In the following video there’s some talk of level five completely-autonomous vehicles racing through populated city streets that might be a bit hyperbolic, but we’d still rather watch that than humans navigating an oval for three hours.

Nvidia’s Pegasus platform and Tegra chips feature heavily in the badass racers showcased in Roborace. Thanks to its cutting-edge hardware and racing-grade intelligence, it’s one of the most impressive uses of AI we’ve seen.

The 💜 of EU tech

The latest rumblings from the EU tech scene, a story from our wise ol' founder Boris, and some questionable AI art. It's free, every week, in your inbox. Sign up now!

If humans can’t beat the robots, they should join ’em.

Robot racing doesn’t have to be autonomous — in fact another company showing off racing robots at CES was Furrion. Its mecha requires a human pilot and races at speeds more acceptable for people: 32kph (20MPH).

When is it coming?

Roborace is here now, but we’re hoping to see more of it in 2018. You can learn about the platform and autonomous racing here at its website. If you’re more into Gundam style futuresports you can learn about Furrion’s efforts in mecha-racing here.

Get the TNW newsletter

Get the most important tech news in your inbox each week.

Also tagged with


Published
Back to top