Could the newest farmhand be a drone?
Research in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences is bringing drone technology to agriculture, one of the major industries with excellent potential for growth. Specifically, drone technology is being tested with sheep at Virginia Tech.
"We are looking at ways drones can be used on small farms," said Dan Swafford, project associate for Virginia Cooperative Extension. "Farms could use drones as a 'check-on' tool to ensure that sheep are where they are supposed to be."
Drones can help farmers gain quick access to see if an animal is in need or injured, to examine if a ewe has delivered a new lamb, or more generally to check the status of the farm.
Agriculture is one of the industries where drones will make a big impact in the coming years. A report from PricewaterhouseCoopers found that the potential market for agricultural drones is $32.4 billion because high-tech systems with the ability to monitor crops or livestock can reduce human errors and save time and money.
Do drones make more sense than static cameras with CCTV?
(Score: 2) by DannyB on Thursday January 25 2018, @02:37PM
I say pissed off dude with a gun, who doesn't like people flying a commerical drone over other land adjacent to theirs and thinks they can shoot at anything airborne because they live by their own rules and the law does not apply to them because they're special and they have rights, etc. And they know they are not smart enough to do 'geek stuff' but focus on brawn over brains. And Football!!!
People today are educated enough to repeat what they are taught but not to question what they are taught.