Spectacular Accidents in Drone Race in California

A drone sprays water during an operation to reduce air pollution near the Giant Swing and Wat Suthat in Bangkok, Thailand in January 2019. Reuters
A drone sprays water during an operation to reduce air pollution near the Giant Swing and Wat Suthat in Bangkok, Thailand in January 2019. Reuters
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Spectacular Accidents in Drone Race in California

A drone sprays water during an operation to reduce air pollution near the Giant Swing and Wat Suthat in Bangkok, Thailand in January 2019. Reuters
A drone sprays water during an operation to reduce air pollution near the Giant Swing and Wat Suthat in Bangkok, Thailand in January 2019. Reuters

A recent drone race at University Central Florida (UCF) made one thing clear: the robot revolution remains a ways off. A parade of autonomous drones took turns tumbling awkwardly through the air, veering sharply toward walls and crashing, sometimes in spectacular fashion, at Addition Arena during the first-ever race of the machines.

Nine vehicles were given three chances to navigate a track made up of four square-shaped checkpoints essentially set in a straight line during the Drone Racing League's season-opening event. Of the 27 runs, only two resulted in the drone making it through the first checkpoint.

During a panel discussion on the drones programmed with artificial intelligence, Sertac Karaman, an associate professor of aeronautics and astronautics at MIT, said: "If you're not seeing any failures, you are not pushing the technology enough."

The race marked the launch of the first division of the league to feature vehicles not piloted by humans by remote control. Instead, the teams had to train the vehicles to spot, identify and then figure out a way to evade obstacles in their paths, while staying on track toward the goal. The result was a series of heats that featured drones checking out their environment and spotting obstacles before ultimately deciding to either turn around, jolt sky high or shoot toward the floor as a crowd of about 500 cheered them on.

The new circuit will reward the winning team with $1 million at the end of a four-race circuit, which will next visit Washington, DC, on November 2. Team USRG, based at the research-centric Kaist University in South Korea, won the UCF event.



Microsoft to Invest $3 Bln to Expand AI, Cloud Capacity in India

26 March 2021, Bavaria, Munich: The Microsoft logo hangs on the facade of an office building in Parkstadt Schwabing in the north of the Bavarian capital. (dpa)
26 March 2021, Bavaria, Munich: The Microsoft logo hangs on the facade of an office building in Parkstadt Schwabing in the north of the Bavarian capital. (dpa)
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Microsoft to Invest $3 Bln to Expand AI, Cloud Capacity in India

26 March 2021, Bavaria, Munich: The Microsoft logo hangs on the facade of an office building in Parkstadt Schwabing in the north of the Bavarian capital. (dpa)
26 March 2021, Bavaria, Munich: The Microsoft logo hangs on the facade of an office building in Parkstadt Schwabing in the north of the Bavarian capital. (dpa)

Microsoft will invest about $3 billion to expand capacity for artificial intelligence and its Azure cloud-computing services in India, CEO Satya Nadella said on Tuesday.

The tech giant is the latest to pledge investment in India, a country seen as a key growth market for US technology companies thanks to its population of more than 1.4 billion people and low-cost internet access.

Executives ranging from Nvidia chief Jensen Huang to Meta's chief AI scientist Yann LeCun have visited India in recent months.

The $3 billion investment in India would be the "single largest expansion" done in the country, Nadella said at a conference in the southern Indian city of Bengaluru.

Microsoft will also train 10 million people in AI in India by 2030, Nadella said.

When Nadella visited India early last year, he announced the company will provide 2 million people in the country with AI skilling opportunities by 2025, focused on training individuals in smaller cities as well as rural areas.

Nadella met Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Monday, and the pair discussed "tech, innovation and AI" and "Microsoft's ambitious expansion and investment plans in India."

Microsoft has been pouring billions of dollars into expanding capacity across the globe to boost AI infrastructure and its data-center network.

The company last week unveiled plans to invest about $80 billion in fiscal 2025.

The investment, more than half of which will be in the United States, will focus on developing data centers to train AI models and deploy AI and cloud-based applications.