Very interesting, i’m looking forward to seeing how the teams to represent a country with a lot of FRC teams already established (like the US) will be picked.
First point, they actually got a freaking water-game. I’m shocked.
Secondly… What are the restrictions on this? Who can actually do this?
EDIT: Still high-school students. “FIRST Global invites one team from every nation to participate in an international robotics event that builds bridges between high school students with different backgrounds, languages, religions, and customs.”
Build system looks relatively simple, robots seem to be more of a FTC or VEX EDR type of scope. Should be relatively easy to put together for inexperienced teams from some of these poorer countries. Frankly, I do not think this will become a program that competes with FRC or FTC, or will be something that FRC teams look to progress up to.
The very fact that there is only 1 team from each nation sets a cap on its potential growth. I feel that this competition is primarily for second and third world nations, so that they can work on amazing solutions for the future as well as introduce FIRST as a whole to their countries. Having a single national team makes it much easier for teams in poorer areas to receive funding. Hopefully when these people are introduced to our program they will increase the presence of other FIRST programs in their countries.
I can hardly imagine what it will be like to have a single event where all of the nations involved in FIRST have an opportunity to compete against one another.
Looks like REV’s FTC offerings may be the kit of choice. Depending on the scale of the challenge, that sounds pretty good to me-- we’ve been extremely happy with their parts for FTC.
Also looks like they have some new products on the horizon (like a pulley system!!!). Very much excited to see what FIRST Global ends up looking like.
Also, I really like that control system, at least physically. Hopefully FIRST likes it to and we get to use it for FTC in a year or two.
The very fact that there is only 1 team from each nation sets a cap on its potential growth. I feel that this competition is primarily for second and third world nations, so that they can work on amazing solutions for the future as well as introduce FIRST as a whole to their countries. Having a single national team makes it much easier for teams in poorer areas to receive funding. Hopefully when these people are introduced to our program they will increase the presence of other FIRST programs in their countries.
I see it more as a marketing/PR type of thing that is intended to drive growth in the other FIRST programs, versus getting growth purely within itself. As noted, they won’t be striving for team growth as much as visibility/exposure, both for the FIRST program tree as well as individual efforts to expand FIRST into areas in the developing world.
Robot sizes look similar to that of Vex/FTC? Interesting way to compete against Vex :P. Seems like they are keeping the barrier to entry low, and borrowing the theme-ing from FLL. And using so many REV parts is pretty awesome!
It really seems like it came out of nowhere too. Really interesting, but not all that fleshed out yet, I really want to know more.
[li]There is absolutely no mention (as far as I can tell, so far) of FIRST .[/li]
[*]The only thing I see that they share is a partial logo, Dean Kamen, New Hampshire (FIRST Global shares an address with DEKA), and robots (well…More Than Robots). [/LIST]