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dystopian... is there something wrong with actual insects keeping their day jobs?



If you ever hear new robot + useful task always assume it's a cover story for weapons delivery. Why do you think so many new robots are advertised as great for "search and rescue after a disaster"? Its one config file away from search and kill in a war zone.


Insect-bots are the penultimate search and kill. Also the penultimate mass kill. The ultimate would have to be nanobots if we can ever get to reliable swarms of them.

But it’s not the weapons that interest me so much as what people come up with as countermeasures. It’ll be fascinating to watch the next few years.


Imma invest in fly swatters


Economics scares me more.


Insects don't want to work anymore! Lazy bastards keep complaining about pollution and climate change and pesticides


This robotic pollinator can barely even fly for 45 sec, they cannot scale it sufficiently they can just say minidrone but to even think about using it as an actual pollinator and the economics making sense is at the present far far away.


Yes. They are being exterminated. The earthworms have almost dissapeared. The ants seem to still be able to survive though.


Insects are now free to do art...with subscription ai pushed by the big giant tech.


Maybe beekeeping is hard on Mars, so we need a new way to polinate the food supply?


Extinction, generally.

I'd rather have combat insects we can turn into pollinators once the ecosystem collapses than have nothing at all.


I think I'd rather just have nothing at all.


If you travel and see how people live in very large cities, especially in Asian countries, you'll find that interacting with any sort of nature is already optional for many people. These people won't notice. The indiscriminate pesticides will continue to flow, killing the natural bee/insect populations, with a slow transition to artificial pollination being an efficiency quirk of modern farming.


My mother used to work in social care for underprivileged city kids and she told me a story once where they took the kids to a farm. They were astonished that milk came from a cow.

I basically have to fly to the Canary Islands to see starlight.


One step closer to the Matrix


"The envisioned indoor farm would grow fruits and vegetables inside a multilevel warehouse, maximizing yield per acre while minimizing environmental impacts through a controlled, closed-loop system."


What about indoor vertical farming? Or disease killing pollinators? Or climate change doing the same?


Yeah, all our pollution and climate change is disrupting ecosystems.

Our only way to ensure survival on and off the planet is to mimic their actions (in this case pollination) to ensure that if we do manage to push more and more species to extinction we have options for being able to continue after they are gone.


Or we could plant some bushes, trees and wildflower meadows inbetween fields?


With no economic value ? Definitely no. /s




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