Comments
LeptonsAndQuarks t1_ixo828g wrote
What doesn't it do that it promises?
WimbleWimble t1_ixoestc wrote
/u/Hapaclapious 's dick was almost completely whipped off.
LeptonsAndQuarks t1_ixoez24 wrote
Well they said it cuts weeds down not a forest
WimbleWimble t1_ixofjdh wrote
Can't see the forest for the wood.
Hapaclapious t1_ixofetl wrote
Found the Tertill vendor lol
[deleted] t1_ixpjet3 wrote
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Icy-Letterhead-2837 t1_ixpg4vt wrote
If it's anything like Lomi, a scam and waste of energy.
dibraizmar t1_ixqa6ez wrote
My mom just bought one of these Lomi things, care to elaborate on what you mean? Thanks!
Icy-Letterhead-2837 t1_ixqdi99 wrote
It's essentially just a drier for crap. Here's a fun video that does the work for you, lol. If you k ow anything about basic science (what it takes to boil water), you'll get it.
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VitaminPb t1_ixni1b5 wrote
Headline: 45% of crops lost to pests, this robot isn’t related to that at all!
tehbantho t1_ixnk2hw wrote
This is an advertisement. Conveniently on sale today too.
FYI: This product is from the makers of the Roomba. While they have an excellent lineup of vacuum products, it wasn't always that way for them. Let this thing bake in the development oven a bit longer, and you will see they add features that make it actually work how they claim it works.
culnaej t1_ixnmnm7 wrote
So it’s an Amazon product
smthngwyrd t1_ixo6r40 wrote
I looked into this and you have to put stakes over the seedlings or it whacks it. It wouldn’t work in a succulent garden
culnaej t1_ixo6zsj wrote
Not sure if you meant to reply to me?
MapleSyrupFacts t1_ixonm0x wrote
The fact is maple syrup was first invented around the Montreal area by native indians. Those same natives are said to have inventented democracy as we use it today.
hunter5226 t1_ixp6qtn wrote
Makes you wonder if there's some sorta connection between maple syrup and democracy, eh?
culnaej t1_ixonumd wrote
I see, I guess this pertains to the Amazon forest
Soggy-Ad-8349 t1_ixpm48k wrote
I can’t believe it’s not butter
culnaej t1_ixqvndu wrote
Yeah, it’s pretty margarinalized
VikingBorealis t1_ixq0u3p wrote
As if there's one type of democracy today...
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keastes t1_ixpqe8p wrote
Maybe? The FTC Is currently taking an interest
Lynda73 t1_ixodwwc wrote
I’ve seen what happens when a roomba encounters dog poop ….
InAFakeBritishAccent t1_ixpvvoy wrote
Most of this sub and the gadgets sub is just an endless stream of ads pretending to be news.
thisismadeofwood t1_ixovghr wrote
Weeds are pests, and herbicide is a type of pesticide, just like insecticide and fungicide are types of pesticide
mferrari_3 t1_ixp1yzb wrote
No one thinks of plans when they hear the word pest in relation to gardening. I don't even know if what you said is accurate, but it is not commonly used and definitely being used in bad faith in this advertising.
lughnasadh OP t1_ixnrnii wrote
>>45% of crops lost to pests, this robot isn’t related to that at all!
The opposite is the case.
Herbicides (that will weeds) account for 90% of pesticide use worldwide.
[deleted] t1_ixnwiiy wrote
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Zech08 t1_ixpo7go wrote
Yea i dont see how pests could even be related to a robot that destroys weeds...
Prince_LunaShy t1_ixnig11 wrote
CW: Arachnophobia!!!
Spiders kill more "pests" than all of our methods for killing pests combined. While this robot is specifically for weeding, it's important to note that we don't actually need a wild technological solution to pest control. Techniques and strategies already exist that will be a million times cheaper and effective than spending money and electricity on expensive robots and their targeting systems. Cranberry farming has already embraced this - they sew the field with iirc hunstman spiders (or another non webspinning kind), and the spiders eat the pests. They need people who are really seriously not afraid of spiders because the way they harvest cranberries is by flooding the field with water, which causes all the cranberries to rise to the top, along with thousands of spiders. When this happens, they like to climb to higher ground, which happens to be all over the workers (oh my god I could never).
Broad spectrum "pesticides" (as in, ones that aren't targeted to one organism or a group) don't just kill pests, they kill everything. In fact, the spiders are going to die first because, like tuna accumulating mercury, they build up higher amounts from their prey. Not only do pest species often become resistant to pesticide, but they end up with no predators at all. We don't need to make mechanical pest killing machines, we need to start utilizing the biological ones that already exist and are way more cost effective. People just don't like spiders, though, and the current system gives Monsanto a bunch of money, so they're not going to stop.
LanceCriminalGalen t1_ixo2p6e wrote
Wow, I love spiders. I need to plant some cranberry trees.
WimbleWimble t1_ixoeyo3 wrote
It's estimated several MILLION children a year are saved by spiders eating insects that carry disease.
In the war with the insects, the spiders are on our side!
BurntRussianBBQ t1_ixp9lpf wrote
Totally agree but I do kill any brown recluse I find in my house. Only have seen like 3 in 20 years tho
WimbleWimble t1_ixq7e8b wrote
> I do kill any brown recluse I find in my house
what about Asian shut-ins and Australian hermits? <--couldn't resist
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Spicy_Lobster_Roll t1_ixo5cny wrote
Spooders are just the best! r/tarantulas
Successful_Ruin223 t1_ixo77o2 wrote
There are natural oils derived from plants,who's presence alone is a deturuant to incecets, that are safe to use in combination with DE. Dust fields with a combination of the 2 and grow small patches of said plants in places that create overlapping areas of natural oils and fragrance being released. The small areas would surely be less than the potential losses. If it took 10% of the space up it would save the rest of the 50% lost now.... unless I am misunderstanding things
PersonOfInternets t1_ixpqfd7 wrote
You just talked me into doubling down on mechanical killing machines.
Prince_LunaShy t1_ixseu55 wrote
I have also seen stuff like rasberry farmers releasing hamsters into their field. They don't eat the brambly bushes or the raspberries but they will eat the weeds and insects. I think they're released after being nuetered or something, as they imply eventually they're eaten by the local wildlife themselves. That's just probably more of a niche solution than the spider thing.
PersonOfInternets t1_ixtd396 wrote
Aww hamsties. I'd eat those raspberries.
Dickmusha t1_ixnyx1n wrote
How fucking delusional do you have to be to think these are a logical answer to this problem. You going to making thousands and thousands of these and hope for the best while they some how don't just become mass litter in the fields and fields of wheat we have to grow? This is a useless gadget and nothing more. I am guessing this is actually an ad for this useless product.
usmclvsop t1_ixou9y9 wrote
This product is probably useless, but robots using lasers to kill weeds without harming wanted plants will be amazing for agriculture. The amount of herbicides that can be replaced with tech will be greatly beneficial to the environment.
Dickmusha t1_ixpjb1j wrote
Yeah Dragonballs would be really cool too. Then we could just wish away all of our problems once a year.
But seriously imaginary technology that fixes all our problems always sounds cool... but rarely works out. I really doubt the answer to our problems will be expensive robots flying around fields fixing things magically for us. The robot kiosks at McDonalds can't get my order right and amazon delivery drones have turned out to be rc car ice chests because practically wins out in the end. We are going to need real functioning AI before anything like this works.
hwmchwdwdawdchkchk t1_ixpowhz wrote
Dickmusha t1_ixrjtpn wrote
That is a massively expensive version of OPs impossible nonfunctioning example. Of course you can pump shit loads of money into making things work .. but its not going to be scalable in an economic way.
usmclvsop t1_ixrmone wrote
The very first oled tv cost $15,000 and today you can get one for $500. Technology will improve and become more affordable. You think this is a case of if but I guarantee it’s a matter of when.
Dickmusha t1_ixrniu0 wrote
Me right above you"
"I really doubt the answer to our problems will be expensive robots flying around fields fixing things magically for us. "
As usual people on reddit don't actually understand the points other people make but instead project what they want to fight against onto people disagreeing with them.
200 dollar shit robots will not be doing this job. The only thing capable of this job is absurdly expensive compared to the alternative ... herbicides.. technology is not at the point where thousands of expensive robots combing unbelievable amounts of farm land are going to be an economically viable answer. When AI is in Sci Fi land levels of availability we will have all kinds of magical tech. This idea is 100 years away... won't solve the real issues facing mass farming by then .. and is no where near as affective as GMOs will be at facing this issue... and the current option available is a diesel guzzling mess.
zempter t1_ixpkyyg wrote
It's not nearly as far fetched as you are making it sound. But never in the near future will you be able to operate out of such a small system, especially a small solar panel.
Image recognition AI is pretty good these days though, and lazer tech can cut through a lot of materials, so it's really just a matter of having a strong power source, and a more expensive set of equipment.
akusokuZAN t1_ixpmv3p wrote
I literally dreamed of this, back when we had an orchard and it was a really painstaking process to remove all the weeds between the grape vines/rows. A strong laser shooting down the row with a hard surface at the end.
But as the weed is cut and falls down, it'd get in the way and my dream soon turned into a fire nightmare :)
Dickmusha t1_ixrjdpi wrote
None of that will work in real life. That works in farming videogames. I live a city away from farm land. That idea is not going to work its not that simple and it will never be. You need a thinking machine making actual decisions to to do anything close to this.
MilkshakeBoy78 t1_ixqz0sl wrote
> The robot kiosks at McDonalds can't get my order right
it should always work. i dont think you know how to use the kiosk.
Dickmusha t1_ixriyuw wrote
Ok sure. I order a chicken quesadilla literally last week at taco bell and it sent the wrong items to the cash register. So it gave me a different item because the skus in their system changed and the cashier literally told me "Oh yeah its been doing that" So no. I mean its pointless pointing this out but its literally something that happened to me. That incident has happened to me multiple times. I'm not just making shit up I only brought it up because of the issue.
WimbleWimble t1_ixof0iz wrote
If they can be easily modified into sex robots, they will sell pretty quick on Ebay.
akusokuZAN t1_ixpmqoh wrote
This is an ad. Please make a sponsored ad next time, thank you.
cpt_raymondholt t1_ixrtk9v wrote
I don't know why we can't report posts in nearly all the subs I visit for astroturfing, advertising, and the like. I'm stuck with reporting 'misinformation' or 'fundraising' for shit like this. It infuriates me, and I'm never budging on it.
Lynda73 t1_ixofu9f wrote
My first comment was removed because I forgot they have a word limit. But this is just an ad. Where’s the article, because otherwise isn’t this spam?
hats_cats_muscrats t1_ixog49h wrote
OP is up up-selling useless gadgetry that will only create more e-waste.
Hard pass.
cpt_raymondholt t1_ixp7yac wrote
so we're just letting blatant greenwashing and advertising in here now?
Hyalus33 t1_ixo2vsd wrote
If these things killed spider mites I might be interested.
Danktizzle t1_ixokp1j wrote
Get yourself some huntsman spiders.
Hyalus33 t1_ixoksyz wrote
Never heard about this before. I’ll look into. Thanks for the tip.
TheArkansasBlackbird t1_ixov3nr wrote
You are planting your pot too close together. That's why you have spider mites. If you spread the marijuanna out a little bit it gets enough airflow that the spidermites don't actually like living there.
Also why you can't get rid of them. Your shit is too close together.
I live in a spider mite infested area and I've only had them twice and they actually just died off naturally when the summer hit and the humidity went away.
You can honestly remove a lot of your pest issues by understanding what they prefer to live in and making that a non issue.
Now for the commercial grower they want as much money as they can make per square inch, so they pay to remove the issue. (don't worry, I'm also one of those, but I do my dense planting in the winter cause I sell plants to other people). But for the home grower, just opening up the space and some good pruning can give the airflow that makes spidermites go away.
orangutanoz t1_ixpod27 wrote
Can people get Huntsman spiders outside of Australia?
CandL2023 t1_ixp38vd wrote
This is just an ad for a piece of shit product. Now if you want to look into products that can manage weeds without chemicals check out that laser farm robot. You've probably seen clips of it rolling along torching tiny weeds. I know nothing about the unit and operating costs but on the surface it looks promising. Automated weeders and Combines seem like the way to go.
TheArkansasBlackbird t1_ixouj00 wrote
ANYONE that grows plants on the regular would recognize this as BS.
WimbleWimble t1_ixofeag wrote
Corrected this for you:
A cheap Stealable solar-power plastic robot
Now its at least an honest advert.
scott3387 t1_ixpm7rf wrote
The source of the weed problem is the constant tiling of the earth. Many farms around me have stopped doing it now thankfully but plenty still do it because 'that's what we have always done'.
Tilling brings dormant weed seeds up to the surface into a nice soft tilth. No till soil has about 20-50% of the weeds. It also kills 50% of the microbes every time you till (microbes are how nature converts organic matter into the stuff plants need to grow, replacing the need for fertiliser).
The problem is getting enough organic matter on the scale of thousands of acres which means that sadly artificial fertilisers are often still necessary but you don't need to till to sow seeds any more. There are automatic disk cutters, that put the seed in a very narrow slot with minimal disturbance.
Look up Dr Elaine Ingham (genius researcher) or Charles Dowding (practical teacher)
MiserylC t1_ixr90yv wrote
Doesn't no till use Roundup to deal with weeds?
scott3387 t1_ixrd1ms wrote
You can but it's generally a waste of money at home and you need far less in a field setting.
In a home garden, you start as you mean to go on with a thick layer of cardboard and 3 inches of organic matter (compost, manure, leaf mold etc, whatever you have). That smothers most weeds but things like bindweed might need continously removed until it runs out of energy (might take a year). After that a simple regular, light hoeing does most of the job for any rogue seeds blown in. Weeding takes me maybe 10 minutes a year total per 8x4 bed.
LoghamSmoot t1_ixpdlj5 wrote
big ad anyway dont buy it. would take so long for the small ass solar panel to change it
jbdi6984 t1_ixnocq9 wrote
Right. I am supposed to believe this bot replaces a good farmhand and some pesticides?
Tablesmasher420 t1_ixpxmuq wrote
How is that little thing going to handle a thousand acre field?
bloodguard t1_ixpyxyy wrote
If they have one that can wander over a rock garden and murder anything green I'd buy one. Even if you put a barrier down things still constantly pop up.
theabominablewonder t1_ixq32o9 wrote
There’s some interesting reviews on youtube. You have to have a prepared bed that’s fairly flat and well organised with protectors for where you have plants growing. You have to put a barrier around its working area. Also you occasionally need to clear the wheels and if it rains, it can stop working in wet mud. So it’s a gimmick really - a lot of work to have a suitable area for it. It will work in the right conditions though. Also the sale price seems to be its usual price.
andre3kthegiant t1_ixqdely wrote
This seems like product placement article, more than groundbreaking technology (pun intended)
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FuturologyBot t1_ixnhash wrote
The following submission statement was provided by /u/lughnasadh:
Submission Statement
Approximately half of global agricultural farming production is lost due to pests. This robot doesn't deal with them all, just weeds, but how long before robots can tackle insects, fungi and other diseases in crops?
Doubling global food production would be a staggering achievement. It's amazing to think the mass adoption of cheap plastic robots could contribute so much to that goal.
Please reply to OP's comment here: https://old.reddit.com/r/Futurology/comments/z3solb/a_cheap_200_solarpower_plastic_robot_that/ixnci8q/
KillerNinja86678 t1_ixnn24a wrote
Doesnt matter how much food there is if it cant all be transported across the globe to developing countries etc.
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old_man_indy t1_ixp080b wrote
“Not so fast!” said the Crop Chemical Lobbyist.
“We’re listening…. With our pockets.” replied the U.S. Politicians.
Advanced-Depth1816 t1_ixpa6vt wrote
Ya PLASTIC. There are plenty of natural aromas and plants and probably more to keep pests away and real farmers know that
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iaalaughlin t1_ixpglr3 wrote
Oh look. Another way to inject micro plastics into the environment.
SaltyToxicContent t1_ixpivyg wrote
You try to leave one of these out anywhere near Doncaster….. it will be on fire, have kids riding on it or pulling a gypsy wagon in hours!
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papak33 t1_ixps5e6 wrote
The fuck is this shit!?
This sub is such a cesspool.
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yogacowgirlspdx t1_ixqcbu0 wrote
weeds and bugs are 2 different things. perhaps this eliminates the need for herbicide but not pesticides.
ThirstyTraveller81 t1_ixqwwwj wrote
They need these that can kill dandelions on your lawn. Prob would need a camera and some ai
Lysercis t1_ixrftdm wrote
I've seen those guys in action on a convention for bio farming & innovation. They had them in all sizes up to as big as as a small car and even flying watering drones!
I made a joke pointing at the booths of some tractor manufacturers that they better make their tractors flying or in twenty years it will be all drones and some people got really mad at me.
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OliverSparrow t1_ixyhunn wrote
Utter boondoggle. You have around quarter of a million plants in a hectare. At what rate is this consumer product going to sift through them for weeds? What does that do for pests? To suggest that shifting from agrochemicals to this sort of thing would "double yield" is at best misleading and at worst a lie.
[deleted] t1_ixpfsre wrote
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LewAshby309 t1_ixqeu8l wrote
Dont sell this as THE SOLUTION against any kind of chemicals. That's a fairytale you can tell people who have no farming knowledge.
How long does this thing take for even just 1 acre?
Now scale that up to a proper farming size.
Even if that problem would be solved you have the next issue that you can only used it as long as the plants are small.
This is meant for a small garden.
datagov63 t1_ixnnl6n wrote
The problem is the premise that some plants are weeds and have no value if they don't produce food.
lughnasadh OP t1_ixnci8q wrote
Submission Statement
Approximately half of global agricultural farming production is lost due to pests. This robot doesn't deal with them all, just weeds, but how long before robots can tackle insects, fungi and other diseases in crops?
Doubling global food production would be a staggering achievement. It's amazing to think the mass adoption of cheap plastic robots could contribute so much to that goal.
FrenchFryCattaneo t1_ixpfjwu wrote
This is a toy that has nothing to do with commercial agriculture.
Ashahoocherie t1_ixnwgvo wrote
It's coming soon. It's already here actually.
Hapaclapious t1_ixnoo30 wrote
My brother bought one for my mom last year, it's absolutely useless.