podcast

Podcast: How Computer Vision Is Changing Your World

In this episode, we talk about how computer vision works and discuss an application coming out of the Technical University of Denmark that can help dairy farmers remove weeds from their fields.

author avatar

16 Nov, 2021. 1 minute read

In this episode, we talk about how computer vision works and discuss an application coming out of the Technical University of Denmark that can help dairy farmers remove weeds from their fields. As always, you can find these and other interesting & impactful engineering articles on Wevolver.com. 



This podcast is sponsored by Mouser Electronics (EXTERNAL).   


EPISODE NOTES

(1:00) - Detecting Unwanted & Hazardous Objects With Vision AI  (GOOD)

(16:20) - Robot Trained To Remove Weeds From Organic Fields (BAD)

Episode 44 was brought to you by Mouser Electronics, Farbod & Daniel’s favorite electronics distributor. Click here  (EXTERNAL)to learn more about Mouser's guide for developing the computer vision project that Mouser used in their warehouse for inspecting labels.


About the podcast:

Every day, some of the most innovative universities, companies, and individual technology developers share their knowledge on Wevolver. To ensure we can also provide this knowledge for the growing group of podcast listeners, we started a collaboration with two young engineers, Daniel Scott Mitchell & Farbod Moghaddam who discuss the most interesting content in this podcast series. 

To learn more about this show, please visit the shows page (GOOD). By following the page, you will get automatic updates by email when a new show is published.

Be sure to give us a follow and review on Apple (EXTERNAL) podcasts, Spotify (EXTERNAL), and most of your favorite podcast platforms!

Take a few seconds to leave us a review. It really helps! 

https://apple.co/2RIsbZ2 (EXTERNAL)

if you do it and send us proof, we’ll give you a shoutout on the show.

article-newsletter-subscribe-image

The Next Byte Newsletter

Fuel your tech-savvy curiosity with “byte” sized digests of tech breakthroughs.