India is experiencing a shortage of coconut harvesters. It's dangerous work, as harvesters must climb trees that are sometimes 50 ft tall. Once they reach the top of the tree they have to hack away at the stems with a machete, making their grip on the tree more tenuous. To deal with these problems, researchers have designed a robotic coconut tree climber and harvester. It wraps its way up the coconut palm's trunk, then deploys a remote-controlled circular saw to release the coconuts from their stems.
Thursday, 3 September 2020
Popular Posts
-
Looking for something to illustrate a post about crunch-time in game development, I ran into this video depicting many forms of footwear (...
-
Anyone can Google the capitals of the world, but figuring out which countries despise each other can get more complicated. And that'...
-
Google's recently announced new redesign of desktop search results would have made ads pretty much look exactly like search results. Go...
-
Donald Trump's undocumented personal servants were “often left to perform the most intimate and personal work” in the Trump households, ...
-
Beth Skwarecki reviewed the Motiv fitness-tracking ring and liked it a lot. I can't get over how tiny and inconspicuous it is: it sync...
-
There's a fun livestream on right now at the Basket Cat Blog . Blog post here , and YouTube livestream is here: ' Chibi and potat...
-
Retired boxing champion Floyd Mayweather Jr. offered to pay for the funeral and memorial services for George Floyd. The family has accepte...
-
Not to be confused with that painfully mediocre Dave Eggers novel, Netflix's new reality show The Circle is basically the IRL version ...
-
Bonobo (aka Simon Green) just released this beautiful new music video for the track "Bambro Koyo Ganda" from his album Migration...
-
The Trump administration will put a fox in every henhouse, from the Goldman Sachs execs who'll run the treasury to the working conditi...
Powered by Blogger.


