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Okay. Then build robots to do it. Have you thought for a second about why these robots don't already exist? Perhaps it has something to do with available cheap labor. Really really strange to see a pro-immigration argument that amounts to "Big Ag needs their slave labor".


There wasn't even a single, popular vacuum robot with less then 7% one star ratings (complaints with valid utter failure). How naïve must one be to expect decent robots for farming. And those very soon? Do you believe in Santa? Or Tesla FSD?


A little difficult to parse your comment, but I think you're calling me naïve for asking the tech community on a message board for the incubator that has backed and does back the some of the most successful tech startups ever to think a little more deeply about how to solve these kinds of problems with technology. Wherein I posit that one of the reasons this tech community seemingly lacks interest - and surely the difficulty of the problem is also one of those reasons - is the availability of cheap labor, resulting in a weak argument for funding this kind of venture.

Interesting.


I'm not against automation. I'm against the interruption of the food supply chain. I don't won't the US to see a lot of pitchfork in use -- and that wouldn't be for farming.

I agree that (slave like) misuse of cheap labor is a problem.

We have a similar issue here. (Bad cleaning, by badly payed, overworked cleaners).

I'm a bit angry because I looked into fixing it by (partially) automating it, but the supply chains are rather bad. The currently available mainstream robots (Dreame, Roborock) are not up to the task (no proper support in Europe). The only interesting option seems to be cleanfix from Switzerland.

To make things short: that anger shouldn't have targeted you, because it boils down to my own current incompetence to fix a real problem. Sorry!




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