GAINESVILLE,
Fla. (AP) -- Wearing black headsets with tentacle-like sensors
stretched over their foreheads, the competitors stare at cubes floating
on computer screens as their small white drones prepare for takeoff.
"Three,
two, one ... GO!" the announcer hollers, and as the racers fix their
thoughts on pushing the cubes, the drones suddenly whir, rise and buzz
through the air. Some struggle to move even a few feet, while others zip
confidently across the finish line.
The
competition - billed as
the world's first drone race involving a
brain-controlled interface - involved 16 pilots who used their willpower
to drive drones through a 10-yard dash over an indoor basketball court
at the University of Florida this past weekend.
With every step of this sort, I simply cannot help but wonder, what happens when the electricity goes off?
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