By Jana Rose SchleisMissouri News Network Caleb O’Neal is spending his Saturday at the Montgomery County fairgrounds teaching ...
This article is authored by M Chuba Ao, national vice president, BJP and Nagender Parashar, director, Parashar Industries.
A growing number of conservative lawmakers are sounding an agricultural alarm as congressional China hawks work to limit ...
The Federal Aviation Authority (FAA) estimates that between 1.6 and 1.8 million small unmanned aerial vehicles (sUAVs) will be registered for recreational use by the end of 2024. Thanks to their ...
The technology has moved from novelty to necessity on many farms and ranches. Enthusiasm for drone use in agriculture is growing quickly, says Caleb O’Neal, University of Missouri Extension field ...
Farming might be a lot more fun if you could fly drones to monitor your fields. Students at Waipahu High School have shown a lot more interest in agricultural and environmental studies this year since ...
The Kathmandu Post on MSN
Drone helps farmers tackle old challenges
For decades, sugarcane farmers like Ashraya Badayak of Hattibhoja in ward 6 of Belauri Municipality in Kanchanpur, struggled ...
A new Connecticut company, Almanax, is using agricultural drones to spray seeds, water, and fertilizer on farms. Drones offer a cheaper alternative to traditional sprayer tractors and can help control ...
WILKINSON — One of the first times Aaron Collins operated a drone, trying to implement the new technology into a farming business, the drone quickly crashed. “The first time we had it we had done ...
FAIRHOPE, Ala. (WALA) - Aerial drones are being integrated into society more and more and they’re likely to be the next big step in commercial farming. “Flying tractors,” you say? Well, not exactly, ...
Customers can conveniently access drones for eliminating manual or time-consuming tasks achieving superior results, such as for surveying, inspections, security and law enforcement, or precision ...
Drones in the tens of thousands will be in the skies by 2030, the Federal Aviation Administration predicts. But where some may fear precision weapons or flying spy cameras, Steve Markofski sees flying ...
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