@ZiggityZig there was a test in England of a very small, fully automated farm. Like locked and no humans.. I read an article about it I now (of course) can't find.
@ZiggityZig FOUND IT! https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-38304842 (or at least a bbc article)
@Camerondotca Cool thanks for locating it. It was written in 2016 so I wonder if their financial prediction came true. "...American report suggested the global market for agricultural robots could be worth £13bn by the year 2020."
@ZiggityZig there is a weird intersection of knowledge in my brain about this. Farm equipment manufactures are locking down equpiment and claiming you own the machine (sort of) but need them to repair/unlock/allow you to use it. There are farmers hacking their own tractors to use them, so I think that roboticism isn't going to be the issue, it's going to be a "software/who owns this thing?" problem.
@ZiggityZig Like i know a guy who has a fixed wing drone he uses to check on water stations/his sheep and fence lines around his paddocks. Now, he's a very nerdy farmer, but they'll use any tool that will make their lives easier.
@Camerondotca I'm all for that. A few months ago I wrote a post on vertical farming which also looks really promising.
@Camerondotca That's a great takeaway, very similar to paying monthly to use Windows 360, Autocad or a plethora of other software.
@Camerondotca Great follow-up article, the hands-free hectare, I'm setting up a google alert to follow this story. Thanks again for posting it.
@ZiggityZig all good. My brain is a mess of half remembered crap, trivial and bizarre links. So I'm glad to have used it for something useful.
@Camerondotca I would really like to see that test. I'm going to see if can find it. Thanks for sharing.