Agricultural robotics research fellow Dr Christopher Lehnert spoke at CQUniversity yesterday about robots being developed to pick fruit and detect weeds.
One problem they could solve was harvesting labour shortages.
"It's a causal workforce problem. (For farmers) their really high risk is getting a workforce to pick the fruit," Mr Lehnert said.
"There's not a worry about job losses. We're just shifting the paradigm. Instead of being in the field, they will control robots."
He hoped to be well on the way towards a commercial fruit-picking design by the end of next year.
Another part of his research was designing robots for broadacre weed management.
"We are looking at taking the human out of the tractor and getting an autonomous platform," he said.
"The large machines they use on farms do a lot of damage to the soil. They compact the soils and destroy them.
"But robots would be smaller, they wouldn't cause this issue."
Hmm, this kind of thing didn't end well for the Quarians...
(Score: 2) by penguinoid on Sunday July 12 2015, @09:11PM
Skynet is one of the less dangerous possibilities. A proper AI wouldn't even have to fight a war against us, but might still exterminate us like we exterminate other species -- incidentally, through habitat destruction. Basically, a strong AI could do whatever the heck it wants, and you better hope it was programmed exactly right with respect to what it wants, and that there is no unforeseen shortcuts (eg if told to do things that make people happy we almost certainly end up with electrodes stimulating our pleasure center).
RIP Slashdot. Killed by greedy bastards.