how technology helps us
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technology helps us in various ways in our life.
in our life technology take an important role.
it is help for people in such ways to promote any issues and shared information and financial issues country development, etc...,
in our life technology take an important role.
it is help for people in such ways to promote any issues and shared information and financial issues country development, etc...,
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HEY MATE HERE'S YOUR ANSWER....
You can’t deny that technology helps us work smarter. It can decrease labor needs and costs by providing greater access to information, enabling timely and informed decision making, among other things.
We have seen the explosion of computers and hand-held devices in the last decade using technologies that have increased computational and analytical capacities for less money. This creates opportunities for acquiring, storing and analyzing digital data that is playing out across every facet of our lives, including along the global produce and floral supply chain.
What might have taken three of four people to collect wash water quality data in a packinghouse or processing plant, can be done with a single computer and properly arrayed sensors. An aerial drone equipped with digital cameras can now make daily passes through an orchard in advance of harvest to discern fruit maturity. Certainly, technology can offer operators alternatives for performing certain operational tasks or replacing conventional practices that require less direct labor input. Among these are:
Supplier selection and management. Increasingly operators in our industry are moving away from a vertical integration business model and becoming more reliant on service providers and suppliers to perform key functions. A grower might employ a fertilizer company to spread fertilizers in fields, a seedling company to provide transplants, a pesticide application company to spray crops when needed, work crews to weed or thin crops, a harvest company to harvest the crop and finally a shipper to cool and sell the crop. Virtually every permutation of this scenario occurs across our industry scanning the extremes from growers owning or operating every aspect of production to only focusing on the growing of the crop.
To execute internal and external tasks through suppliers and vendors requires ample communication and data sharing. Using software to manage vendors and communicate needs, track operations or analyze data to determine next steps is becoming more commonplace every day.
Sensor technology is rapidly expanding as the cost continues to decline while reliability and accuracy improves. With wireless capabilities, sensors can directly transmit data as it is collected, making it actionable in or near real-time, and in specific locations. In Australia, researchers are using a fully automated robot containing a variety of active sensors that collects data as it wheels over a field.
Its adjustable, lightweight frame is designed to accommodate multiple sensors and digital cameras and to breakdown into smaller units for easy transport. With its high-resolution optics, researchers see this robot as a more economical alternative to use of drones in commercial fields.
HOPE IT HELPS YOU...
You can’t deny that technology helps us work smarter. It can decrease labor needs and costs by providing greater access to information, enabling timely and informed decision making, among other things.
We have seen the explosion of computers and hand-held devices in the last decade using technologies that have increased computational and analytical capacities for less money. This creates opportunities for acquiring, storing and analyzing digital data that is playing out across every facet of our lives, including along the global produce and floral supply chain.
What might have taken three of four people to collect wash water quality data in a packinghouse or processing plant, can be done with a single computer and properly arrayed sensors. An aerial drone equipped with digital cameras can now make daily passes through an orchard in advance of harvest to discern fruit maturity. Certainly, technology can offer operators alternatives for performing certain operational tasks or replacing conventional practices that require less direct labor input. Among these are:
Supplier selection and management. Increasingly operators in our industry are moving away from a vertical integration business model and becoming more reliant on service providers and suppliers to perform key functions. A grower might employ a fertilizer company to spread fertilizers in fields, a seedling company to provide transplants, a pesticide application company to spray crops when needed, work crews to weed or thin crops, a harvest company to harvest the crop and finally a shipper to cool and sell the crop. Virtually every permutation of this scenario occurs across our industry scanning the extremes from growers owning or operating every aspect of production to only focusing on the growing of the crop.
To execute internal and external tasks through suppliers and vendors requires ample communication and data sharing. Using software to manage vendors and communicate needs, track operations or analyze data to determine next steps is becoming more commonplace every day.
Sensor technology is rapidly expanding as the cost continues to decline while reliability and accuracy improves. With wireless capabilities, sensors can directly transmit data as it is collected, making it actionable in or near real-time, and in specific locations. In Australia, researchers are using a fully automated robot containing a variety of active sensors that collects data as it wheels over a field.
Its adjustable, lightweight frame is designed to accommodate multiple sensors and digital cameras and to breakdown into smaller units for easy transport. With its high-resolution optics, researchers see this robot as a more economical alternative to use of drones in commercial fields.
HOPE IT HELPS YOU...
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