Drones and the Future of Farming | National Geographic

Drones and the Future of Farming | National Geographic



From driverless tractors to unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), farming technology is rapidly evolving. Farmers can use drones to …

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30 Comments

  1. holaaa excelente video me gustaria que continuen haciendo material de calidad¡¡¡!!! Voy a continuar mirando sus creaciones. Les mando un saludo nos vemos luego 👍🏽👍🏽👍🏽

  2. it’s going to be who controls the worlds food for example you’ve seen the seedless watermelon owe ya they make genetically modified food so no one can buy seeds to plant, and guess who has most of original seeds stored none other than Al Gore and his buddies the Clintons, wow he starts a global scare while he takes control of something else to control the population if you don’t believe it try growing some then the next year try to replant the seeds you will have nothing another example is Heirloom tomatoes they are only one that are not GMO modified and they will replant and have all nutrients also look up “bad seed

  3. This is awesome, we at Bruni IR crop surveys offer Precision Ag. services TO increase yield, minimize water pesticide and fertilizer usage. Our drone team has a state of the art drone that can fly 1,000 acres per HOUR all day if necessary an the F.A.A. waiver to fly it 25 miles Beyond Line Of Visual Sight. Nat Geo finds the best stories.

  4. India needs drones for 1000 uses BUT corrupt Govt system and Corrupt Terrorist supporting Public will not let it done. Govt system and Police will import it for useless purpose at 100 times cost to be dumped in stores or for their kids to play. Operators will be appointed to fly it at commercial Pilots rate. This is sure. Kejriwal brought dummy fogger machine at 19 lakhs with no use at all. They are not serious at all.

  5. The carbon nanotubes in the crops are going into your body and they stay active… conductive and reactive to wifi. They clump in your veins and under 100 nanometers they go in the organs. Welcome to the cloud. —–It's all here for your own good.

  6. Insecticides! Pesticides this is not agriculture"s answer, just look at BIG AGRA! The solutions are in permaculture and sustainable farming.

  7. Fewer immigrants, fewer babies, a better way. Smaller population, tweaked to fit on "available" land (much of it in reserve for rich folks to tourist on), and we grow our own food, maybe to trade (I want oranges in Vermont), but seasonally. Cucumbers that don't rot two days after I buy them, berries that last over a month…I pick them myself. Yeah, I get Ricardo's Law: but food isn't money. Food is food.

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