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kunalk9995

Precision Agriculture to Drive the Demand for Agricultural Robots - 0 views

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    With its recently published study "Global Agricultural Robots Market - Drivers, Restraints, Opportunities, Trends, and Forecast up to 2025", Infoholic Research forecasts that the global market for agricultural robots is primarily driven by the increasing demand for precision agriculture. This trend is expected to continue during the forecast period 2019-2025, fueling the market growth at a CAGR of around 22% to surpass a revenue of $20 billion by 2025. The robots used in the agriculture sector for various activities, i.e., weed control, seeding, monitoring, and harvesting, are termed as agricultural robots. They are also used for livestock applications, including milking, herding, and fish farming. Globally, there is an increase in demand for food, mainly due to the growth in population and increasing average life expectancy. Further, there is an increasing shift of workforce, especially in rural areas, from agricultural activities toward the service sector. The need for automation in agriculture is heavily driven by these two factors Read more on: https://www.infoholicresearch.com/press-release/agricultural-robots-market/?utm_source=pravinmane&utm_medium=medium&utm_campaign=lead-generation
jacob logan

Siemens Healthineers to acquire Corindus Vascular Robotics for $1.1bn - 1 views

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    Siemens Healthineers has signed a definitive agreement to acquire all fully diluted shares of US-based Corindus Vascular Robotics. The deal is valued at $4.28 per share in cash or $1.1bn in total. Corindus develops, produces and sells robotic systems for minimally invasive procedures, while Siemens' products use quality imaging before and during medical interventions to make minimally invasive treatment possible.
jacob logan

Electronic skin is giving prosthetics an exceptional sense of touch - 1 views

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    Robotic and prosthetic devices may one day be equipped with a sense of touch equivalent to or better than human skin. A research team at the National University of Singapore (NUS) has developed the Asynchronous Coded Electronic Skin (ACES) system, which can sense touch at 1,000 times the speed of the human nervous system.
3BL Media

Modern-Day Robofish School Humans on How to Detect Water Pollution | 3BL Media - 1 views

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    British scientists create life-like robotic fish that scour the depths of the ocean for pollutants
Alex Parker

Machine learning could soon be capable of tracking human emotion - 1 views

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    Despite the many benefits of AI, the inability to understand the complexities of human emotion has long been highlighted as a reason for why human intervention is still vital to providing the soft skills robots cannot master
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