-
11 votes
-
Berkeley engineers develop customizable, 3D-printed robot for tech newbies
12 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 -
Air Spot | Reinforcement Learning behavior research
6 votes -
China hosts first fully autonomous AI robot football (soccer) match
7 votes -
Amazon now counts more than one million robots at its facilities
11 votes -
Is the AI bubble about to burst?
35 votes -
Coco Robotics raises $80M to scale up autonomous delivery fleet
7 votes -
Amazon makes ‘fundamental leap forward in robotics’ with device having sense of touch
10 votes -
Chinese factories are more automated
13 votes -
China pits humanoid robots against humans in half-marathon for first time
19 votes -
Norway's 1X is building a humanoid robot – Neo Gamma is a prototype designed for testing in the home environment
4 votes -
‘Do not pet’: A robotic dog named “Spot” made by Boston Dynamics is the latest tool in the arsenal of the US Secret Service
20 votes -
Watch a six-axis motor solve a Rubik’s Cube in less than a third of a second
19 votes -
Building the worlds first Etch-A-Sketch camera
5 votes -
Meet Sparkles
6 votes