![]() |
Re: Kinect is Legal for Both Drive Station and Field Use (Here’s why)
I feel like this is more cool-factor than anything else, and in my opinion isn't worth hassling FIRST and wasting time over. Sure you could use a Kinect, but you could also just program a camera or two more efficiently.
|
Re: Kinect is Legal for Both Drive Station and Field Use (Here’s why)
Quote:
|
Re: Kinect is Legal for Both Drive Station and Field Use (Here’s why)
Quote:
It would be pretty easy for defender robots to use the Kinect or similar allowed-lasers to mess with it if they wanted. And not to be pessimistic but even people from the audience or other team members could use items to interfere and no one could know because its invisible to the eye. Even things like camera auto-focusing that release IR wavelengths could interfere to a certain degree. I think it's great that there's people out there that are pushing to use this but I simply don't think that the technology is mature enough to use easily because it posses too many potential uncertainties in different situations for any algorithm you may throw at it. So far everything it's been used for (including Microsoft) and has actually worked reasonably well has been done in very very controlled environments. Just my 2 cents. |
Re: Kinect is Legal for Both Drive Station and Field Use (Here’s why)
Sure, its easy for me to stand in the stands and hold up a vision target, rendering anyones autoscoring system useless. But am I going to? No.
|
Re: Kinect is Legal for Both Drive Station and Field Use (Here’s why)
Best of luck to what you are trying to accomplish, but I think most can use a joystick to drive as well. I think using joysticks can provide more predictable, and therefore more effective and safer results.
|
Re: Kinect is Legal for Both Drive Station and Field Use (Here’s why)
Just one point to bring up:
The Kinect has a motorized pivot on the base. How do you pass the FRC motor rules, short of cracking the case and removing it? |
Re: Kinect is Legal for Both Drive Station and Field Use (Here’s why)
The GDC has spoken - Not Legal: http://forums.usfirst.org/showthread.php?t=16240
|
Re: Kinect is Legal for Both Drive Station and Field Use (Here’s why)
Quote:
Arguably, you could enclose the laser completely to avoid the <R02> violation. (The laser is integral; the device causing it not to be exposed to the surroundings may not have to be integral, depending on the interpretation of the rule. However, as a practical matter, I can anticipate the Q&A response....) As for the motorized base, since there is significant signal processing and I/O on the Kinect, it might be considered a "COTS computing device" for the purposes of <R45>. On the topic of the laser rule, while it's relatively easy to enforce—except for the sometimes-fluid definition of "exposed"—it's somewhat too conservative. These are obviously eye-safe lasers—the Kinect has a Class 1 rating (for an exposed device, eye-safe on a continuous basis). The rule ought to allow any number of unmodified Class 1 lasers for competition use, on the robot and operator console, subject to a gameplay rule about creating distractions. There should be a separate venue rule stating that if you're in possession of a class 3 or higher laser, or in possession of a laser modified so as to invalidate its rating, or using any laser whatsoever in a vexatious way, you'll be thrown out of the building. |
Re: Kinect is Legal for Both Drive Station and Field Use (Here’s why)
Quote:
|
Re: Kinect is Legal for Both Drive Station and Field Use (Here’s why)
I'd just like to point out that, while it wouldn't necessarily be better, it would certainly be cooler to control it with Kinect.
|
Re: Kinect is Legal for Both Drive Station and Field Use (Here’s why)
Quote:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kn93BS44Das The processing overhead for the Kinect's is much lower than any stereo vision implementations I have heard of. This entire system runs on a pair of dual core 1.66GHZ Intel Atom motherboards, mounted on the robot and running off an unfiltered 12V DC in from the battery. It should be noted that the motors are MUCH smaller than FRC and the battery is much bigger so voltage dip is nowhere near what is seen on an FRC robot. |
Re: Kinect is Legal for Both Drive Station and Field Use (Here’s why)
<R02> ROBOT parts shall not be made from hazardous materials, be unsafe, or cause an unsafe condition. Items specifically prohibited from use on the ROBOT include (but are not limited to):
C. Any devices or decorations specifically intended to jam or interfere with the remote sensing capabilities of another robot,including vision systems, acoustic range finders, sonars, infra-red proximity detectors, etc.(e.g. including imagery on your robot that, to a reasonably astute observer, mimics the VISION TARGET) D. Exposed lasers of any type (COTS devices with completely enclosed integral lasers, such as a laser ring gyro, are permitted) This kind of says it all doesn't it? |
Re: Kinect is Legal for Both Drive Station and Field Use (Here’s why)
Quote:
|
Re: Kinect is Legal for Both Drive Station and Field Use (Here’s why)
Quote:
The Martians (494) and More Martians (70) are still working with the Kinect and hope that other teams will join us in the adventure of discovery. |
Re: Kinect is Legal for Both Drive Station and Field Use (Here’s why)
Quote:
Max, as I understand it the IR lasers extend out in a spread pattern. The provide full depth information at thousands of points and combine that with full color video. The Kinect does not just take 2 dimensional pictures of things. It provides distances, widths, heights, and all at a speed that can record high speed movement in real time and reconcile that with a full color picture. This system could be used in FIRST to emulate the Lidar used on so many DARPA vehicles for full field navigation. Indeed, David, this system would be ideal for a fully autonomous robot. How's that going, by the way? The software and hardware has already been developed by thousands of engineers over a number of years, using technology by many different countries. It works in ANY ambient light condition because of the IR - even in nearly pitch black. It's accurate from around 1.5 feet to 20 feet - 1/3 of one of our fields. Max, that's really pretty exciting stuff. The year you put one of these on the robots and use it in autonomous is the year you win the innovation award available at every competition you attend. Awesome. I'm sorry to see FIRST rule it out this year, though I can't see that rule in place for long. |
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 00:02. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2017, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © Chief Delphi