The “Lettuce Bot” is a four-wheeled weeding machine designed and
built by Indiana-based start up Blue River Technology using a $US400,000
angel investment as well as an early grant from the National Science
Foundation. It relies on an integrated camera and advanced visual
algorithm suite to differentiate between two breeds of lettuce and
common field weeds, then aims and injects the invasive,Many industries
can use Origin Laser engraving and laser marking machine for a huge range of applications. Corrugated Metals has included this curving machine
tutorial to help our visitors understand the roll forming process.
nutrient-stealing little bastards with a toxic cocktail of plant
fertiliser, which also feeds the produce — it’s a win, win. See, when
over-applied,When choosing the shape, the car led bulbs
should be similar to the shape of the lamp base. even common
fertilisers like Miracle Grow can induce chemical burn on a plant’s
roots, killing them and rapidly starving the rest of the plant.Kern
Electronics and Lasers,is a leader in large format Laser engraver and laser engraving systems.
“Most
of the technologies used in farming today have been of two types –
mechanical, which permits bigger, more efficient tractors, bigger
planters, and bigger harvesters; and genetics,Laser engraving, and laser marker,
is the practice of using lasers to engrave or mark an object. which
offers crop modification. That’s good for increasing the amount of food
available,” BRT co-founder Jorge Heraud told Kidela. “However, large
segments of the population don’t like it.
We are introducing an
entirely new technology to farming – advanced robotics. It is more high
tech and something that very few companies are doing or are even aware
of. We believe that agriculture is a perfect place for automation. There
is too much labour being used in some segments of agriculture and we
want to change that,” he explained.
The latest iteration of the
Lettuce Bot will eventually be pulled behind a trailer through the
fields at speeds up to 5km/h (though the current prototype does it at a
third that speed). It relies on a trio of visual algorithms. First a
navigation algorithm spots and identifies individual plants within a
row. Next, the Classify algorithm discerns lettuce from common weeds
with approximately 98 per cent accuracy (the system does this by
comparing what it sees to a large library of pre-identified visual data —
essentially the computer’s installed memories of what iceberg, romaine
and dandelions look like.) Finally, it engages the Kill algorithm, which
allows the machine to accurately inject the lethal load of fertiliser
into a weed’s root system by estimating the needle’s subsoil depth.
But
why lettuce, organic lettuce, you ask? First, California’s number one
crop (yes, besides marijuana) is lettuce. However, lettuce isn’t exactly
a high-value crop and margins are already tight. But they’re even
tighter when you have to pay an army of laborers cash money to clear the
fields by hand because you can’t utilise cheaper inorganic pesticides
and they can’t use W-2s. What’s more bacterial outbreaks such as e. Coli
that are traced back to organic foods are commonly caused by
cross-contamination from these workers’ boots. The Lettuce Bot could
drastically increase farm productivity while simultaneously removing an
illegal, dangerous and questionably compensated industry.
The
prototype is, of course, still under development and has to work out
plenty of kinks. For example, the current system works on Iceburg
lettuce and Romaine lettuce, nothing else. If one wanted the machine to
weed, say, an asparagus patch, they would first need to preload the
robot with huge data stores of marked visual examples of asparagus in
order for it to know what to kill.
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