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Military & Aerospace Electronics November 2005 |
Stanford Improves Robot Car with Coverity Software Stanford's entry, Stanley, won the $2 million prize in the robotic car race, defeating 22 other finalists in a 131-miles race with the use of Coverity's source code analysis software. |
InternetNews October 10, 2005 Roy Mark |
Stanford's Stanley Wins Off-Road Prize The driverless Volkswagon powers past Carnegie Mellon's entry to win $2 million first prize in the Pentagon's driverless vehicle challenge. |
Popular Mechanics January 2006 Steve Russell |
Stanley, Stanford University's Robot Car - DARPA Grand Winner The race: 132 miles. 23 vehicles. 0 drivers. Stanley, a VW Touareg, wins the race of the century (so far). |
IEEE Spectrum December 2005 Willie D. Jones |
Hard Drive In the past year, the robotics community has learned a great deal about how to make cars drive themselves. Recently, computer algorithms showed that cars might just be ready to take the wheel without human chaperones. |
Wired January 2006 Joshua Davis |
Say Hello to Stanley Stanford's souped-up Volkswagen blasted through the Mojave Desert, blew away the competition, and won Darpa's $2 million Grand Challenge. Buckle up, human - the driverless car of the future is gaining on you. |
National Defense March 2008 Grace V. Jean |
Robots Get Smarter, But Who Will Buy Them? While the technologies to enable fully autonomous vehicles have advanced, robotics experts say there is still more to be done to make them viable in military and commercial applications in the next decade. |
Popular Mechanics October 2007 Erik Sofge Render |
DARPA's Robot Car Race Hits the City: 2007 Preview (with Video) A cross between a DMV driving test and a rally, this year's race promises to be DARPA's most complex yet. |
InternetNews June 20, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
It's Back To The Future At Intel Intel today showed off some of the projects from its research labs around the world that could be coming soon to a store, hospital or street near you. |
InternetNews December 14, 2004 Tim Gray |
Study: Linux the Safest Out There A study says Linux contains far fewer bugs than most commercial software. |
Popular Mechanics January 2007 Daniel H. Wilson |
DARPA's Tough New Robot Road Test A robot expert explains why DARPA's previous robotic races were GPS-guided cakewalks compared to the upcoming Urban Challenge. |
InternetNews February 7, 2005 Sean Michael Kerner |
Study: MySQL Hard on Defects A new study from Coverity finds only 97 defects in more than 400,000 lines of code in the open source database. |
InternetNews August 3, 2005 Sean Michael Kerner |
Study: Linux Code Grows as Defects Decline Linux kernel code quality has improved dramatically over the last six months. |
InternetNews January 11, 2006 Sean Michael Kerner |
Linux Security a National Matter Stanford University, Symantec and source code analysis firm Coverity are the three recipients of a Department of Homeland Security grant called Vulnerability Discovery and Remediation Open Source Hardening Project. |
InternetNews July 27, 2009 |
Finding Linux Bugs Before they Become Exploits The story of how a Linux exploit actually wasn't, thanks to some static code analysis. |