Spring Carnival!

Nolan | April 25, 2009

Hello again! So, another update from Pittsburgh…I got the opportunity last weekend to attend Carnegie Mellon’s annual Spring Carnival and had a blast! Here’s an overview:

CMU Carnival is about 3 things–No School, Booth, and Buggy–all 3 pretty equally important. We get Thursday and Friday off of school and the festivities don’t end until Sunday afternoon, which is awesome especially when the weather is really nice! Booth is a very eccentric CMU tradition where different student groups race to finish building a mini-house around the given theme for a year. Booths ranged from a giant “Wall-E-Pi” to a Giant Peach, a nuclear fall-out shelter, and even a giant Poke-Booth. The Kiltie Band also performed our Spring Concert to start off the festival.

Buggy is the other main event that occurs at Carnival. You might not know what it is at first glance, but it’s basically a hill race with customized racing buggies (over a few thousand a pop, if you want a good one) that often hit 40 mph at the bottom of Flagstaff Hill. 5′ tall women are aggressively pursued at the beginning of the school year to drive the buggies and ensure their team’s victory. Believe me–these teams are HARD CORE. The Student Development Council beat Pi-KA’s record this year, but I put a video from last year anyway to give you the excitement of what happens. 

Only 2 1/2 more weeks of school! 


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Cool Robots At Carnegie Mellon

Nolan | April 19, 2009

Hello again from Pittsburgh! Quite a few things have happened over the last month and a half, so I’ll be spreading the events out in a series of several posts. To start it off, I have some cool videos to show–all of them are well-known robots both at CMU and around the world.

The first is of “Tank”, the official Roboceptionist for Newell-Simon Hall on campus ( home of Carnegie Mellon’s Robotics Institute). He’s surprisingly really smart, as he’s does facial tracking, gives directions, says the weather, and I’m sure much more while keeping a slight grin on his robotic face. If you’re ever able to visit, be sure to talk to him at NSH north entrance.

The second video was from the Young Inventors International “Inventing the Future” Conference, held at Carnegie Mellon two weeks ago and organized by Anne Swift and Project Olympus, a startup incubator for students at Carnegie Mellon. Performing a market analysis of Marek Michalowski’s Keepon Robot was just one highlight of the event, as we were able to participate with roundtable discussions with numerous VC’s, marketers, inventors, and established CEO’s in an informal setting–all geared towards young, college-age inventors and entrepreneurs.

For a more detailed recap of the event with some more videos, please check out the YII blog at http://www.innovatorshub.com/

I was able to make a lot of connections and listen to some pretty inspiring stories, and I look forward to participating in it again next year!

Lastly, Carnegie Mellon and Astrobotic teamed up to show off their new challenge for Google’s Lunar X-Prize competition for $20 million. I was able to get the whole tour on video, but feel free to skip around as you want. My friend Abhinav and I were able to talk with Red Whitaker, the founder of Astrobotics, CMU’s DARPA challenge robots, and numerous other CMU robotics spinoffs,  which was pretty cool too!




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