Let us make this simple. No one wants the job of picking small fruit,
and there is always plenty of other work available on a farm. What you are doing is making small fruit more
readily available to consumers in a form that is edible. We will also hardly stop with strawberries.
There are plenty of wild fruits
presently not been domesticated because human picking is necessary. Small fruit is hard put to yield ten pounds
per hour. That means half its wholesale
production cost is easily the picking.
Thus this is very important. I presume the technology is flexible enough
to sort out a whole range of fruit.
Robotic strawberry pickers could be on the way
By Ben
Coxworth
13:56 October 20, 2011
Now that we're moving towards automated orange-sorting and autonomous tractors, what might be the next step in
replacing human agricultural workers with machines? Well, how about robotic
strawberry pickers? That's what scientists from the UK 's National Physical Laboratory
(NPL) say could be on the way, thanks to a system that is able to identify ripe
strawberries in the field.
Work first began on the system in 2009, at which time is was being
developed for use with cauliflowers. Although it was reportedly successful, a
drop-off in demand for the vegetables caused the project to stall. It has since
been revived, for use with other crops. Strawberries are particularly
well-suited to the technology, as their high water content and dry leaves make
them easier for the system to image, and the time-consuming process of picking
them by hand could be greatly reduced through automation.
The system is able to non-invasively "see" beneath the
surface of strawberries using four parts of the electromagnetic spectrum,
namely radio frequencies, microwaves, terahertz radiation and far-infrared
light. Both the hardware and software involved are reportedly able to detect
which berries are ripe enough for picking, and are able to do so for a
relatively low cost.
Although robotic strawberry-picking machines would undoubtedly put some
field workers out of a job, the NPL scientists
say that they would also boost efficiency and reduce waste, as under-ripe
berries wouldn't be picked and then discarded. The technology could possibly
also be used for sorting municipal waste.
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