FIRST® AERIAL ASSIST 2014 Robotics Game Unveiled

AERIAL ASSISTSM Game Revealed by Dean Kamen to Nearly 70,000 High-School Students Worldwide at the 2014 FIRST® Robotics Competition Season Kickoff

  • Students urged to become future problem-solvers
  • Senator for New Hampshire Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.) noted: “We need to make sure we have programs like FIRST in every school district to ensure a bright future for each student, as well as for America.”

MANCHESTER, N.H. — (BUSINESS WIRE) — January 4, 2014 — Inventor and FIRST® Founder Dean Kamen launched the 2014 FIRST® Robotics Competition (FRC®) season today with the Kickoff of a new robotics game called AERIAL ASSISTSM before a crowd of 400 people at Southern New Hampshire University in Manchester, N.H., hometown of FIRST Headquarters. Nearly 70,000 high-school students on more than 2,700 teams in 92 cities around the globe joined the 2014 Kickoff via live NASA-TV broadcast and webcast.

Students take measurements of the playing field following the reveal of the 2014 FIRST® Robotics Com ...

Students take measurements of the playing field following the reveal of the 2014 FIRST® Robotics Competition AERIAL ASSIST game. (Photo: Business Wire)

“The students who participate in the FIRST Robotics Competition are not only building robots; they are building character, self-respect, and relationships with their peers,” said Dean Kamen, president of DEKA Research & Development and FIRST Founder, adding, “Winning the game is fun, but the importance of FIRST is that you’ll get much more out of it than you put in, and it’s going to change the rest of your life.”

The 2014 game, AERIAL ASSIST, is played by two Alliances of three teams each. Alliances compete by trying to score as many balls in goals as possible during a two-minute and 30-second match. Additional points are earned by robots working together to score goals, and by throwing and catching balls over a truss suspended just over five feet above the floor as they move the ball down the field.

“The FIRST Robotics Competition develops 21st century thinkers, 21st century workers, and people who will be able to lead in the innovation economy,” remarked Maggie Hassan, New Hampshire Governor, before directly addressing the student participants in the audience at Southern New Hampshire University. “We know that our competitiveness as a state, and as a country in this global economy is going to depend on how well you all can develop as the future problem-solvers we need, and the skills you learn in this competition are critical to our success moving forward.”

At today’s Kickoff, FRC teams were shown the AERIAL ASSIST playing field and received a Kit of Parts made up of motors, batteries, a control system, a PC, and a mix of automation components – and only limited instructions. Working with adult Mentors, students have six weeks to design, build, program, and test their robots to meet the season’s engineering challenge. Once these young inventors build a robot, their teams will participate in one or more of the 98 Regional and District competitions that measure the effectiveness of each robot, the power of collaboration, and the determination of students.

“I love FIRST. It’s about much more than cultivating your interests in science, technology, engineering, and math,” said Senator for New Hampshire Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.). “It’s also about developing important skills in leadership and teamwork. We need to make sure we have programs like FIRST in every school district to ensure a bright future for each student, as well as for America.”

Sponsored by NASA and Needham, Mass.-based PTC, the 2014 FIRST Robotics Competition Kickoff event is an opportunity for teams from all over the world to come together as a community to share in the excitement of seeing the new game unveiled. Teams at local Kickoffs in Australia, Brazil, Canada, Israel, Mexico, and the U.S. watched the proceedings via NASA-TV and were offered workshops and a chance to meet other teams.

“Through FIRST, you’re engaged in a neck-and-neck technology race with us professionals,” said Jim Heppelmann, President and Chief Executive Officer of PTC. “Think of what that experience means; the jobs you can get, the careers you can develop, the problems you’ll solve, the money you’ll make, and the fun you’re going to have. What a special program and special opportunity FIRST is. The 6,000 employees of PTC are proud to sponsor this event and proud to be a Strategic Partner of FIRST.”

“This is more than a game. This experience highlights what you will do in your careers,” said John M. Grunsfeld, Associate Administrator for the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters. “Experience in this competition is similar in many ways to how we design, build, and test NASA robots.”

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