-
14 votes
-
America's dumbest crop: grass
52 votes -
Monsanto products potentially cause cancer
14 votes -
How Denmark plans to roll out the world's first cow burp tax – government is investing billions in technologies to help farmers cut livestock emissions
10 votes -
Forecast accurately predicting an unusual monsoon season reached thirty-eight million farmers
25 votes -
Debunking myths on farmworker pay
23 votes -
How Honeycrisp apples went from marvel to mediocre
42 votes -
China cut fertilizer use and still increased crop yields (2018)
14 votes -
Experiences with FarmBot or similar gardening robots?
This is just a random thought I had. I don't do gardening currently and not looking for advice per se. Just thinking about how the physical world feels far behind in terms of automation compared...
This is just a random thought I had. I don't do gardening currently and not looking for advice per se. Just thinking about how the physical world feels far behind in terms of automation compared to the digital world, and wondering what kind of possibilities are out there. I was wondering how close we are to having consumer-form-factor robots to help with various things, and growing food is a natural starting place.
I was imagining what kind of robots are needed to deal with a garden—assuming a house with a plot of land suitable for a large garden—with tasks like:
- Fetching water, either from plumbed water or a natural water source
- Getting seeds from somewhere. Maybe online shopping and then the robot knowing how to open the box. (Probably not by identifying existing plants and picking/stealing them.)
- Planting the seeds in the right place
- Watering the plants regularly
- Maintaining temperature and sun exposure
- Digging up the plant and bringing it indoors so I can inspect or smell it without having to go outside. Then replanting it safely.
- Determining when food is ripe, picking it, reusing the seeds
- Washing and cooking it
It feels like a lot of these are already available off-the-shelf today. I searched and there is a project which I hadn't heard of before called FarmBot which seems neat and geared toward enthusiasts ("prosumers") and education, and includes open source hardware and software. To be clear I'm not affiliated with them in any way.
FarmBot probably handles a lot of the important parts of gardening, but I'm sure it doesn't handle everything on my list. How far are we from a 100% automated experience?
Other than that there was some recent marketing around cheap robots like LeRobot by HuggingFace (the company where basically all the open-weight AI models are hosted). It has nothing to do with farming except that they have one shaped like a hand, so it could probably be programmed to grasp and move things around.
Sorry for the rambling post. Really curious to hear if anyone else has gone into robotics and interested in hearing your experiences and also other resources on what state-of-the-art looks like. Also I bet a lot of this is solved in proprietary solutions and by Big Agriculture, but right now I'm more curious on the consumer-grade level.
12 votes -
Earth has now passed peak farmland. What's next?
23 votes -
Canadian crops beat global emissions—even after seventeen trips across the Atlantic
26 votes -
A tree a minute: One man planting 1440 trees in a day
7 votes -
The biggest animal welfare victory of the 21st century, explained in one chart | Global fur production has collapsed. Here’s how it happened.
31 votes -
New research on the ancient origins of the potato
8 votes -
California farmers are installing solar, providing financial stability and saving water
12 votes -
Less rain, more wheat: How Australian farmers defied climate doom
15 votes -
How India became a french fry superpower
20 votes -
We are setting out to rewild an Icelandic wetland in a complex project involving birds, freshwater habitats and large areas of degraded peatland
10 votes -
The Danish government deputized private detectorists to unearth artifacts buried in farm fields. Their finds are revealing the country's past in extraordinary detail.
9 votes -
John Deere must face US Federal Trade Commission lawsuit over its tractor repair monopoly, judge rules
44 votes -
US cattle ranchers may have to relearn how to fight an old enemy — the New World screwworm
29 votes -
Groundwater is rapidly declining in the Colorado River Basin, satellite data show
31 votes -
A newly surfaced document reveals the US beef industry’s secret climate plan
35 votes -
The US Food and Drug Administration just approved the first CRISPR-edited pigs for food
23 votes -
How dairy robots are changing work for cows (and farmers)
11 votes -
Are any of you fans of the older Harvest Moon/Story of Seasons games?
I've been a fan of the farming/life sim/role playing/cozy games or however you want to label these games since I was a kid and my older brother brought home a new game for the Nintendo 64: Harvest...
I've been a fan of the farming/life sim/role playing/cozy games or however you want to label these games since I was a kid and my older brother brought home a new game for the Nintendo 64: Harvest Moon 64. Over the years, I played several titles in the series through the Wii/NDS era, before my tastes changed, and I found myself playing more online games with my friends and just less gaming overall.
Stardew Valley releasing was a huge event for the genre and I do greatly enjoy the game (even though I've yet to finish a play through as I keep restarting after taking a break from playing) as it captured the feeling of the early Harvest Moon games really well. It also got me to start the habit of having an N64 emulator and a copy of Harvest Moon 64 on practically every device I own.
There have been some recent remakes of older games, specifically Friends of Mineral Town and A Wonderful life, but I didn't enjoy the art style and some of the changes made to the games, which ended up with me not picking them up.
I was curious if anyone else was a fan of the series (or one particular game in the series), or if there are any recent games that you felt are great in this genre.
9 votes -
World’s first case of bird flu in sheep detected in England
13 votes -
The history and economics of frozen orange juice
9 votes -
The Loess plateau was the most eroded place on Earth until China took action
7 votes -
Wyoming pays $150,000 to settle lawsuit over botched prosecution of hemp farmers
12 votes -
Hundreds of livestock breeds have gone extinct – but some Australian farmers are keeping endangered breeds alive
5 votes -
A newly designed $5 snakebite armor quickly earns US student 18,000+ orders
29 votes -
WANDERSTOP | PC, PS5 & Xbox Series X|S launch trailer
19 votes -
Beekeepers say catastrophic honeybee losses are cause for alarm
37 votes -
Cattle gallstones are worth an absolute fortune — and the Department of Agriculture wants American farmers to get involved
12 votes -
Adding a puppy to our guardian dog team
4 votes -
There's more to Iceland than Reykjavík – this more remote part of the island offers visitors a deep dive into its fascinating history and authentic culture
7 votes -
Global seafood company Mowi is offering a bounty to fishers who catch escaped salmon after an estimated 27,000 fish went missing from a farm off the Norwegian coast
6 votes -
Norway's environment minister has ruled out a ban on open-net fish farming at sea despite acknowledging that the wild North Atlantic salmon is under “existential threat”
16 votes -
Bird flu in US is creating shortages and driving up prices
18 votes -
A forgotten farming technique - planting trap crops to fight pests - is making a big comeback – here’s why
21 votes -
‘The dead zone is real’: why US farmers are embracing wildflowers
34 votes -
The destructive legacy of failed aquaculture
11 votes -
In a first, Arizona’s attorney general sues an industrial farm over its water use
26 votes -
US grocers report egg shortage ahead of holidays amid surging bird flu
25 votes -
Danish lawmakers have agreed to plant one billion trees and convert 10% of farmland into natural habitats over the next two decades
27 votes -
Climate change and fish farming are endangering the future of Norway's Atlantic salmon
7 votes -
Making farming better for bees: can we breed crops that produce more nectar and pollen?
4 votes -
How guayule, a small shrub, could help the US rubber industry
12 votes -
Iceland's vertical farm turning algae into food – pioneering entrepreneurs are growing some surprising crops and doing it sustainably
6 votes