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DIY Team of Hot Rodders’ Among 40 Top Teams Chosen for 2005 DARPA Grand Challenge







DIY Team of Hot Rodders’ Among 40 Top
Teams Chosen for 2005 DARPA Grand
Challenge

DIY Team of Hot Rodders’ Among 40 Top
Teams Chosen for 2005 DARPA Grand
Challenge
06/17/2005 02:40 PM

Los Angeles based AI Motorvators team in the midst of 2 million dollar high-tech national competition. MIT, Princeton teams eliminated [PRWEB Jun 9, 2005]




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DIY Team of Hot Rodders’ Among 40 Top Teams Chosen for 2005 DARPA Grand Challenge

Grok Headline matches for DIY Team of Hot Rodders’ Among 40 Top Teams Chosen for 2005 DARPA Grand Challenge

DARPA Grand Challenge Teams Submit
Videos to DARPA


DARPA Grand Challenge Teams Submit
Videos to DARPA
03/14/2005 05:02 PM
Slashdot Mar 13 2005 11:31AM GMT

DARPA Announces Grand Challenge 2005


DARPA Announces Grand Challenge 2005 06/08/2004 03:16 PM

DARPA Grand Challenge 2005 Announced


DARPA Grand Challenge 2005 Announced 06/08/2004 04:55 PM
DARPA has announced the date for the next Grand Challenge: October 8, 2005. An informational conference for participants will be held on August 14, 2004 at the Anaheim Marriott in Anaheim, Califorinia. The cash prize has doubled from 1 million to 2 million dollars for the first team to complete the challenge. There's a already a Slashdot discussion on the topic.

DARPA Grand Challenge 2005 Rules


DARPA Grand Challenge 2005 Rules 08/03/2004 08:46 AM
DARPA has released the proposed rules (PDF format) for the DARPA Grand Challenge 2005. This time around teams will be required to submit a video demonstration of their robot. Perhaps this will cut down on teams that show up at the final event with a DOA robot. No indication if they will reduce the excessive number of way points used in the first event. For more, see the DARPA discussion forum or the Slashdot discussion on the new rules.

DARPA Grand Challenge 2005 Rules
Announced


DARPA Grand Challenge 2005 Rules
Announced
08/02/2004 08:53 PM

Still More on the DARPA Grand Challenge


Still More on the DARPA Grand Challenge 02/15/2004 07:43 PM

DARPA Grand Challenge PR Problems


DARPA Grand Challenge PR Problems 10/30/2003 11:57 PM
The DARPA Grand Challenge has generated a lot of interest and there are now over 100 teams preparing robots. Most of them are in for a shock when they find out DARPA has decided that only 20 robots will be allowed to enter. An editorial over at mobilerobotics.org has more details as well as transcript of a letter DARPA sent to one of the Grand Challenge Teams about the issue.

DARPA Grand Challenge Maps Revealed


DARPA Grand Challenge Maps Revealed 01/05/2004 06:49 PM
There's been lots of hype about DARPA's Grand Challenge - setting up a 250-mile race course that an autonomous vehicle would have to cover in a limited time period. The original plans said the course would only be revealed two hours before the race began, but for safety reasons, all of the potential routes have already been identified publicly, which is angering a number of contestants. They believe this will give an advantage to other contestants who can simply program in the various courses into their vehicles, which could take away from the whole point of the race. Already, the article reports that a company is offering to go over all of the potential courses with a laser and photographic equipment for any team that wants it. Again, this would seem to go against the entire point of the race (to create autonomous vehicles that could travel anywhere with no warning and no human control). Meanwhile, it looks like a group has taken my suggestion and organized a private version of such a race for all the teams that got rejected from the original one. I'm still waiting for them to sign a TV contract to get these shown on TV alongside Junkyard Wars.

DARPA Grand Challenge Kicks Off March
13th


DARPA Grand Challenge Kicks Off March
13th
03/09/2004 12:19 AM

New DARPA Grand Challenge live action
website


New DARPA Grand Challenge live action
website
04/23/2004 04:26 PM
Just launched: a website promising live virtual coverage of this weekend's Grand Challenge race, in which robotic vehicles will race accross the California desert.
Live Tracking will show relative positions of the Challenge entrants, and requires a 7 MB download each time you use your browser to view the tracking. The Status Board provides a 30 second update of the status of each Challenge team. The Image Gallery will contain the most recent images from the Challenge, updated nightly through March 14.
Link

Moment of visual zen: DARPA Grand
Challenge illustration


Moment of visual zen: DARPA Grand
Challenge illustration
02/16/2004 01:14 PM
In this month's Popular Science Magazine, an illustration by Kenn Brown, who says:
"DARPA is putting together a race of autonomous (robotic) vehicles that runs from LA to Las Vegas. Completely remote, no one at the wheel. They are recruiting people (these guys are serious robot geeks who build and tinker with this stuff as a hobby and obsession) to build their own vehicles to participate in the race. The vehicles range from motorcycles to HumVees. The point of this story is to illustrate DARPA's interest in this technology, and that they hope to have autonomous vehicles waging war by 2015. "
Oh, goodie. I can hardly wait. Link

DARPA Grand Challenge Application
Deadline Rapidly Approaching


DARPA Grand Challenge Application
Deadline Rapidly Approaching
02/01/2005 08:58 PM
If you want a chance at winning the two million dollar prize in the DARPA Grand Challenge for robotic ground vehicles, you need to file an application soon.

Grand Challenge Teams in the News


Grand Challenge Teams in the News 03/06/2004 02:03 AM
As the DARPA Grand Challenge approaches, articles about teams and their robots are begining to show up in lots of local papers. The Baton Rouge Advocate has an article on University of Louisiana at Lafayette's CajunBot. CajunBot also rated an article in the Lafayette Advertiser. You can read about the University of Florida's Team CIMAR Navigator in a recent newswise article. The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette covers the CMU Red Team's Sandstorm. And the San Francisco Chronicle recently covered the three teams from the Bay Area: Team Digital Auto Drive, Team Overbot, and the Blue Team.

Carnegie Mellon's Red Team takes on the
Grand Challenge


Carnegie Mellon's Red Team takes on the
Grand Challenge
12/08/2003 11:48 AM
Article in the Carnegie Mellon News about the university's entry into the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's Grand Challenge, a 250 mile Las Vegas to Los Angeles road race in which all the vehicles have to be able to navigate and complete the race without any human control. The Red Team's planning to race a robotic Hummer that's been tricked out with special electronics, mechanics, and software. Read [Thanks, Josh]...

DARPA Officially Cuts Off Grand
Challengers


DARPA Officially Cuts Off Grand
Challengers
11/04/2003 03:39 PM
We've been following the well-hyped DARPA "Grand Challenge" offroad autonomous vehicle challenge for a while now, and last week reported at how surprised DARPA was that over 100 applications were filed to participate. It seems that DARPA expected no more than 20 or so - and even told state and local officials that it would be no more than 20 in order to get their approval. So, now that they're backed into a corner, they say they're not going to let everyone race, which is pissing off many of the smaller, bootstrapped teams, who are afraid they're the most likely to get cut. The university/corporate backed teams, however, think it'll be good that they won't have to fend off the scrappy upstarts. Either way, this seems like an opportunity for someone. Clearly, there are a lot of folks willing to try to build such autonomous vehicles. Why not start a private offering to run similar races? Why not put them on TV? Make it like "Junkyard Wars" or whatever, and put a little cash behind the prizes. Assuming there are already 86 contestants who won't qualify for the DARPA challenge, you could set up 1-on-1 races and have a weekly show for more than two years just going through those teams. Even if you had five cars per race, you could easily put on a season's worth without even bringing back cars for more races. If it was even remotely successful, there would be no shortage of entrants. So, forget relying on the government to run this race, put the damn thing on TV and support it with private money.

CMU Red Team Gets More DARPA GC Help


CMU Red Team Gets More DARPA GC Help 03/14/2005 06:03 PM
According to a Duke University press release, Duke will be offering assistance to the CMU Red Team. They plan to equip both CMU robots with their "Duke Radar Object Identification Device" (DROID). The radar sensors will use a unique approach by trying to identify only above ground objects while avoiding the terrain itself. They hope this will reduce clutter in the resulting data. Duke is the latest in a long list of organizations donating time, equipment, and money toward a CMU win in the DARPA Grand Challenge.

PC-Powered Buggy, Motorcycle Compete In
DARPA Challenge


PC-Powered Buggy, Motorcycle Compete In
DARPA Challenge
03/06/2004 02:01 AM
We talk to two of the twenty-five teams designing vehicles for the DARPA Grand Challenge: a driverless car race across the desert for a $1 million prize.

New York Developer Chosen to Make Grand
Ave. Grander (Los Angeles Times)


New York Developer Chosen to Make Grand
Ave. Grander (Los Angeles Times)
08/10/2004 05:24 AM
Los Angeles Times - After struggling for decades to bring urban vitality to a civic center often derided for clearing out after dark, Los Angeles civic leaders Monday picked a New York developer to undertake a $1.2-billion transformation of downtown's Grand Avenue.

Cobalt Horizons Responds to DARPA Grand
ChallengeDesert Field Test of Robotic
Vehicles Offers $2 Million Prize


Cobalt Horizons Responds to DARPA Grand
ChallengeDesert Field Test of Robotic
Vehicles Offers $2 Million Prize
09/25/2004 02:15 AM
Cobalt Horizons is competing in the Grand Challenge Competition to send an autonomous ground vehicle through a US Government sponsored 150 mile obstacle course in the Mojave Desert. [PRWEB Sep 25, 2004]

DARPA GC Team GPLs Telemetry Data


DARPA GC Team GPLs Telemetry Data 04/03/2005 05:38 PM
Igor Carron of the DARPA Grand Challenge Pegasus Team writes, "we are committing ourselves to provide the rest of the robotics community some of the data we gather during our trial runs. We expect these trial runs to be more sophisticated as we go along. Probably one of the unusual decision we have made for this vehicle is to not have range sensors such as laser SICK, ultrasound or radar. Our sensor module features an IMU with information on acceleration (3-axis), rotation information (3-axis), heading (3-axis), a GPS and one or several cameras (.jpg or .bmp taken at 10-20 Hz). Because we do not believe the issue is about how to gather data but to make sense of them, these data are provided free of charge and are licensed under the GNU GPL."

DARPA GC Team GPLs Drive-by-Wire Code


DARPA GC Team GPLs Drive-by-Wire Code 06/05/2005 11:13 PM
In early April, Pegasus Team GPLed their DARPA Grand Challenge telemetry data. Now they've gone a step further and released a version of their Python drive-by-wire software under the GNU GPL. It's very interesting to see code being used on one of the DARPA entries. This code is a simplified, early version used during testing to control the Pegasus robot remotely from a Laptop by using keyboard commands to accelerate, brake, and turn. Keep in mind the released code is intended as an example only. So, before you try running it as-is on your 1 ton, 300 HP DARPA robot, read their dislaimer: "if you do not know what you are doing do not use this program on a motorized vehicle or any machinery for that matter. Even if you know what you are doing, we absolutely cannot be held responsible for your use of this program under ANY circumstances."

Fortune on the Grand Challenge


Fortune on the Grand Challenge 02/16/2004 01:23 PM
Good story in Fortune Small Business about one of the teams competiting in the Grand Challenge, that Las Vegas to Los Angeles road race in...

Getting ready for the Grand Challenge


Getting ready for the Grand Challenge 11/17/2003 11:40 AM
A few months ago the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA, announced the Grand Challenge, a Las Vegas to Los Angeles road race in which a road race in which all the contestants have to be "autonomous motor vehicles" that can drive and navigate entirely without any human control. The prize for this robotic Cannonball Run is a cool million bucks, which apparently attracted so many entrants that DARPA had to winnow the field to just nineteen qualifiers, though they may had six more teams to make it an even twenty-five. The race is still on for March 13th of next year and we'll have full coverage here on Gizmodo. Read [Via TechDirt]...

Computing needs a Grand Challenge


Computing needs a Grand Challenge 06/14/2004 08:39 AM
Sir Tony Hoare lays down the gauntlet

Grand Challenge Map Leaked


Grand Challenge Map Leaked 01/06/2004 11:54 AM
Bill Carlson tipped us off to the latest in a series of setbacks for DARPA's Grand Challenge competition. The course map (PDF format) has been leaked to the web. The map was supposed to be kept secret until hours before the race to insure that the robots were able navigate autonomously rather than being preprogrammed for the specific course. A story in The Register has more details about the leak.

Computing need a Grand Challenge


Computing need a Grand Challenge 06/14/2004 08:10 AM
The Register Jun 14 2004 12:56PM GMT

More Grand Challenge News


More Grand Challenge News 03/08/2004 11:16 PM
As we approach March 13, lots of stories are being submitted about the DARPA Grand Challenge. Since our last update, Nature has posted a short article on the race with a small photo gallery of robots and a note about environmentalists concerned that the event might disturb endangered desert tortoises. DARPA now has a crew of "tortoise marshals" rounding up any tortoises that stray into the event area. Doug McGray sent us a link to his in-depth Wired article (which includes quite a few photos). Seth Cabe emailed to say that the Team LoGHIQ website has been updated with new photos and video of their robot. Globalstar issued a press release recently saying they will provide tracking services for the race. Data will be collected from each vehicle and relayed via the Globalstar satellite constellation allowing DARPA to update a map throughout the event. And, last for today, the L.A. Daily news recently ran a story about the Spirit of Vegas team, who aren't going to finish their robot in time for the race.

Navigating the Grand Challenge Course


Navigating the Grand Challenge Course 06/11/2004 11:06 AM
CMU's Red Team has released a technical report detailing the mapping, planning, and navigation system used by their robot, Sandstorm, in the first DARPA Grand Challenge. The paper, title High Speed Navigation of Unrehearsed Terrain: Red Team Technology for Grand Challenge 2004 (PDF format), explains the capabilities and limitations of their navigation system. Both the hardware and software are covered. There's also a section about the "lessons learned" from the experience so far.

Are Sensors the key to Grand Challenge?


Are Sensors the key to Grand Challenge? 05/11/2004 12:12 PM
David Duke of RobotCorps has written a new Robotics Trends article that proposes the idea that the DARPA Grand Challenge is less about robots than about sensor technology. David offers an overview of the types of sensors used by robots entered in this year's DARPA contest and suggests possible sensor technology that we may see in the next contest such as SEEGRID's vision technology.

$1 million Grand Challenge map leaked on
Web


$1 million Grand Challenge map leaked on
Web
01/05/2004 06:50 PM
DARPA says all going as planned

Aerial View of Grand Challenge Course


Aerial View of Grand Challenge Course 07/05/2004 04:06 PM
Tim Holt has created a web app that combines the 2004 DARPA Grand Challenge waypoint data with aerial images from the Terrasoft database to create an interactive aerial map of the Grand Challenge course. You can explore the map or jump directly to a waypoint of your choice. Images are at the 1 meter/pixel scale, and max off-track distance is represented to scale.

Grand Challenge Participants Announced


Grand Challenge Participants Announced 11/14/2003 08:38 PM
Last week we reported how DARPA was stunned that over 100 teams had decided to enter their Grand Challenge of creating a completely autonomous vehicle that could navigate a 250-mile course which would be revealed only hours before the race began. Folks at DARPA were under the belief that maybe 10-15 teams would enter the race, and had promised local officials that no more than 20 would race. It appears they've pushed that upper limit to 25. They've made the official cuts and named nineteen qualifying teams - and said they may name six more out of a group of twenty-six teams who could qualify (DARPA folks want to visit with each of those teams to determine if they can join the race). They also said that, of the 106 applications requested, twenty teams didn't actually submit the application. Thus, forty-one teams were rejected outright. Of those that made the cut, you might be surprised to find a high school team mixed in with teams from CalTech and Carnegie Mellon. The full list of the nineteen approved teams can be found here.

The Grand Flying Robot Challenge


The Grand Flying Robot Challenge 07/23/2004 03:08 PM
If you're sitting around waiting for the X-Prize contestants to blast into space looking for their millions of dollars, or the autonomous vehicles of DARPA's grand challenge to figure out how to travel more than 10 feet or so, there are always other similar "grand challenges" going on. Apparently going on for four years now, the International Aerial Robotics Competition was held yesterday to see if teams could create a robot that can "fly 3 miles, identify a building and enter it in less than 15 minutes." Once again, however, no team successfully finished the challenge. Each year, though, the prize goes up another $10,000. So, while no one won the $40,000 this year, next year the prize should be $50,000. Get to work.

System X Takes on the Grand Challenge


System X Takes on the Grand Challenge 03/22/2005 03:43 PM
In 2003, Virginia Tech built a supercomputer using Power Mac G5s, which ranked as the fastest computer system at any academic institution. From that milestone, Dr. Srinidhi Varadarajan and his team have moved ahead again with System X, a new cluster using 1,100 Xserve G5s. [Mar 21, 2005]

Nanotech's grand challenge is
sustainable development


Nanotech's grand challenge is
sustainable development
04/12/2005 10:44 AM
Big things expected of small science

150 Student Teams Compete in FIRST LEGO®
League “No Limits” 2004 Challenge


150 Student Teams Compete in FIRST LEGO®
League “No Limits” 2004 Challenge
12/17/2004 06:40 PM
FIRST LEGO® League “No Limits”2004 Challenge introduces young people, ages 9 to 14, to the fun and excitement of science and technology while building self-confidence, knowledge and life skills. [PRWEB Dec 15, 2004]

YAPC::NA::2005 Venue Chosen


YAPC::NA::2005 Venue Chosen 09/22/2004 12:20 PM
KM writes "The Perl Foundations Conferences Committee has selected Toronto as the venue for YAPC::NA::2005. The proposal was submitted by Richard Dice and the Toronto Perl Mongers. Dates: Wed - Fri 22-24 June 2005 Location: University of Toronto We hope ...

YAPC::EU::2005 venue chosen


YAPC::EU::2005 venue chosen 09/19/2004 11:11 PM
ambs writes "In the last day of YAPC::EU::2004 at Belfast, YEF announced the chosen venue for YAPC::EU::2005: Braga at Portugal."

DARPA's Grand Challenge Autonomous Road
Race Much More Popular Than Expected


DARPA's Grand Challenge Autonomous Road
Race Much More Popular Than Expected
10/30/2003 11:46 PM
We wrote about DARPA's "Grand Challenge" road race when it was first announced and then a few months ago. In the meantime, it appears that it's really struck a nerve with a lot of people. DARPA says they've received 106 applications to participate, which is a lot more than they expected. They thought there would be much fewer (under 30) applicants, and that many wouldn't pass initial scrutiny. The plan was to announce the entrants by now, but with so many applications, the review process is taking much longer than expected. The Challenge, if you haven't been following the story, is to build a completely autonomous vehicle that can drive on-road and off, which will have to complete a 250 mile course, all by itself, that will only be revealed two hours before the race begins.
Grok Description matches for DIY Team of Hot Rodders’ Among 40 Top Teams Chosen for 2005 DARPA Grand Challenge
GrokA matches for DIY Team of Hot Rodders’ Among 40 Top Teams Chosen for 2005 DARPA Grand Challenge

Team Jefferson, Linux, and Tommy


Team Jefferson, Linux, and Tommy 06/17/2005 07:11 PM
A LinuxPlanet article gives a fairly complete account of Team Jefferson and their Linux-based DARPA Grand Challenge robot, Tommy. Paul Perrone and the other members of Team Jefferson have chosen Fedora Linux as the high-level OS for their robot. There are also embedded micro-controllers handling lower-level functions. Linux is commonly used in robotics aplications but Team Jefferson is unusual in that the chose Java as the development platform for both the Linux box and the microcontrollers. This "might raise a few eyebrows. After all, traveling at 40 miles an hour is no place to get stuck doing a garbage collection pass."

"The Thomas Jefferson Center for the
Protection of Free Expression: The 2004
Jefferson Muzzles"


"The Thomas Jefferson Center for the
Protection of Free Expression: The 2004
Jefferson Muzzles"
04/15/2004 02:33 AM

Rocker Tommy Lee Sets The Trend – Lee's
Promotion Team Requests Promo Only MPE
Exclusively To Distribute New Single
"Tryin To Be Me" to Radio


Rocker Tommy Lee Sets The Trend – Lee's
Promotion Team Requests Promo Only MPE
Exclusively To Distribute New Single
"Tryin To Be Me" to Radio
06/06/2005 12:02 AM
Tommy Lee issues first single from new album "Tommy Lee Presents: Tommyland the Ride" via Promo Only MPE first. [PRWEB Jun 1, 2005]

Can Tommy Cut It?


Can Tommy Cut It? 08/31/2004 01:58 PM
Tommy Hilfiger is the latest exec to get a reality show. Will it help company sales?

Tommy Boy


Tommy Boy 12/03/2002 11:46 AM

"But what if the Guarantee Fairy's a crazy glue sniffer? Next thing you know there's change missing from your dresser and your daughter's knocked up. I've seen it a hundred times."

- Tommy (Tommy Boy)


Jefferson Muzzles


Jefferson Muzzles 04/13/2004 12:38 PM
The Jefferson Muzzles are awarded as a means to draw national attention to abridgments of free speech and press and, at the same time, foster an appreciation for those tenets of the First Amendment.

Tommy, you're permanently expelled!


Tommy, you're permanently expelled! 12/14/2003 06:25 PM
"Want to get arrested? Walk home with me." It's LawForKids, the site devoted to giving the kids the education they need about drinking and other kewl stuff through the aid of really, really, really crappy cartoons. Plus, enjoy the intellectual and grammar-rich discussion on hard knocks in Juvie, plus Flash games about being a good citizen. Not sure about discouraging kids from crime, but I sure as hell want to stay away from a life of web design now.

Tommy Tallarico Speaks!


Tommy Tallarico Speaks! 04/08/2005 05:55 PM
ZDNet Apr 8 2005 8:50PM GMT

Two Spins on What Happened With Tommy
Lee (AP)


Two Spins on What Happened With Tommy
Lee (AP)
06/23/2004 07:09 PM
AP - There's plenty of spin about what happened at the Bellagio's Light nightclub when former Motley Crue drummer Tommy Lee was spinning the tunes. Sean Christie, the club's director of marketing, said Lee had to be removed by security officers, but Lee's manager said the 41-year-old drummer walked out of Sunday's show.

Thomas Jefferson on bl0gging


Thomas Jefferson on bl0gging 04/08/2005 12:46 PM
Dan Bricklin points to Chris Daly's Are Bloggers Journalists? Let's Ask Thomas Jeffeson. Here's a snippet that Dan pulls out of the article: Common Sense and other pamphlets like it were precisely the kind of political journalism that Jefferson had in mind when he insisted on a constitutional amendment in 1790 to protect press freedom — anonymous, highly opinionated writing from diverse, independent sources. In historical terms, today's bloggers are much closer in spirit to the Revolutionary-era pamphleteers than today's giant, conglomerate mainstream media. Both Chris' piece and Dan's discussion of it are well worth reading... [Technorati tags: blogs bricklin...

Microsoft's Tommy Williams responds


Microsoft's Tommy Williams responds 09/12/2004 02:46 PM

Via email.

"blogs.msdn.com does offer individual feeds for each blog and they continue to be full text. But, for some reason, a lot of people subscribe to the main feed and that's what was killing the team paying for the bandwidth.

"So the entries in the main aggregated feed were cut short, but the individual feeds remain full text.

"I personally never understood why anyone would want to subscribe to the aggregated feed. There's way too much stuff there for me to look at. I would rather subscribe to individual bloggers.

"But it seems there are a lot of people who disagree with me, hence the gigantic bandwidth bill."


Are Bloggers Journalists? Let's Ask
Thomas Jefferson


Are Bloggers Journalists? Let's Ask
Thomas Jefferson
04/08/2005 04:59 AM

Anyone who engages in reporting -- whether for newspapers, magazines, radio, television, or blogs -- deserves equal protection under those laws, whether the news is delivered with a quill pen or a computer. By Christopher B. Daly, Boston University


2004 Jefferson Muzzle Awards


2004 Jefferson Muzzle Awards 04/13/2004 09:51 AM

Misreading Jefferson is Sinful and
Tyrannical


Misreading Jefferson is Sinful and
Tyrannical
05/05/2004 05:14 PM
?To compel a man to furnish contributions of money for the propagation of opinions which he disbelieves is sinful and?

Jefferson: Nature Wants Information to
Be Free


Jefferson: Nature Wants Information to
Be Free
01/16/2004 11:04 AM
Since many have said that my view of copyright and patent law is childish and held merely because I grew?

The Shrill Blog: General Tommy Franks Is
One of Us


The Shrill Blog: General Tommy Franks Is
One of Us
09/07/2004 12:17 PM
"the fucking stupidest guy on the face of the earth" .. about Douglas Feith: .. missed that memo

shrillblog.blogspot.com/2004/09/general-tommy-franks-is-one-of- us.html
track this site | 3 links


Retired Gen. Tommy Franks Says U.S.
Should Put Iraq On 5-Year Plan


Retired Gen. Tommy Franks Says U.S.
Should Put Iraq On 5-Year Plan
08/01/2004 10:15 AM
GEN. TOMMY FRANKS BOOK DETAILS IRAQ WAR SURPRISES .. Drudge

prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=/www/story/0 7-30-2004/0002222112&EDATE=
track this site | 3 links


"The Thomas Jefferson Center for the
Protection of Free Expression"


"The Thomas Jefferson Center for the
Protection of Free Expression"
04/14/2004 09:03 AM

The Thomas Jefferson Center for the
Protection of Free Expression


The Thomas Jefferson Center for the
Protection of Free Expression
04/14/2004 09:10 AM
THE 2003 JEFFERSON MUZZLES GO TO .. affronts to free expression .. 2004 Thomas Jefferson Muz .. been announced .. Muzzle Awards .. quote:

tjcenter.org/muzzles.html
track this site | 6 links


Rich Lowry on Tommy Franks on National
Review Online


Rich Lowry on Tommy Franks on National
Review Online
08/18/2004 12:43 AM
Rich Lowry: Franks Lied?

nationalreview.com/lowry/lowry200408170825.asp
track this site | 3 links


Reason: John Perry Barlow 2.0: The
Thomas Jefferson of cyberspace reinvents
his body -- and his politics.


Reason: John Perry Barlow 2.0: The
Thomas Jefferson of cyberspace reinvents
his body -- and his politics.
08/13/2004 01:46 AM
Reason: John Perry Barlow 2.0: The Thomas Jefferson of cyberspace reinvents his body -- and his politics

reason.com/0408/fe.bd.john.shtml
track this site | 5 links


"Zell Miller introducing John Kerry at
the Democratic Party's Jefferson-Jackson
Dinner in 2001"


"Zell Miller introducing John Kerry at
the Democratic Party's Jefferson-Jackson
Dinner in 2001"
09/02/2004 09:07 PM

"A perspective on why people are hating
on Team USA's men's hoops team"


"A perspective on why people are hating
on Team USA's men's hoops team"
08/28/2004 02:53 AM

Jason Anderson - Late night with the
Burton team (Visual Studio Team System),
Part II #


Jason Anderson - Late night with the
Burton team (Visual Studio Team System),
Part II #
07/16/2004 03:03 PM
Part II of "Late Night with the Burton Team" takes you further into the new world of Visual Studio Team System. If you missed it, Part I is here. (The clip here is the second 30-minute segment out of a two-hour session filmed late at night a few weeks ago -- the rest of the session will come next week). In this segment, Jason Anderson and Tom Arnold talk about, and demonstrates, Unit Testing in Visual Studio 2005.

""I can't believe in this day and age
that there's a sports team in our
nation's capital named the Redskins.
That is as derogatory to Indians as
having a team called Niggers would be to
blacks.""


""I can't believe in this day and age
that there's a sports team in our
nation's capital named the Redskins.
That is as derogatory to Indians as
having a team called Niggers would be to
blacks.""
12/02/2003 03:01 AM

New Sports Trend: The Team Doctors Now
Pay the Team


New Sports Trend: The Team Doctors Now
Pay the Team
05/17/2004 10:28 PM
Hospitals and medical practices eager for any promotional advantage have begun bidding to pay pro teams for the right to treat their players.

A Sports Turnaround: the Team Doctors
Now Pay the Team


A Sports Turnaround: the Team Doctors
Now Pay the Team
05/18/2004 09:04 AM
Hospitals and medical practices eager for any promotional advantage have begun bidding to pay pro teams for the right to treat their players.

"Team "


"Team " 04/15/2005 12:12 PM

You mean there IS an IE team?


You mean there IS an IE team? 01/16/2004 01:01 PM

Robert Scoble went to lunch with the head of the Internet Explorer team - yes, they still exist, despite having released nothing but security patches for over two years.

Robert says that the team is looking to work with community members to improve Internet Explorer. If this means dialogue, or even some feedback on what they're up to, this is a very good thing. Less promising is Robert's follow-up comment on the topic of improved CSS and PNG support (by far the most requested developer feature):

Anoth er thing that the commenters generally aren't thinking of is "how to get adoption." I keep pointing out that if we fixed the CSS and PNG issues, you still wouldn't be able to use those for years. Why? Cause consumers (and companies) really don't care about those issues and won't download a new version just cause you fixed one or two issues.

Believe us, we know. That's why we want these issues to be fixed as soon as possible - so we can deploy sites that take advantages of these standards before the oil runs out and human civilisation disintegrates in to a mass of warring tribes more interested in canibalism than visually appealing web sites.


"Call in the second, err, first, err,
different team"


"Call in the second, err, first, err,
different team"
04/28/2004 03:02 AM

DIY Team of Hot Rodders’ Among 40 Top Teams Chosen for 2005 DARPA Grand Challenge

The following phrases have been identified by the grok system as matching this entry: "team jefferson" and tommy

















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