This weekly update focuses on how artificial intelligence and robots are changing farming around the world. AI agents are becoming more common on farms, helping farmers with tasks like weeding, spraying crops, and predicting yields. These smart machines are making farming more efficient and helping farmers produce more food.

One company called Solinftec has deployed over 100 autonomous robots called Solix across farms in the United States. These solar-powered robots can move through fields and spray weeds automatically. Another company called Polybee uses physical AI agents—which are autonomous drones that fly around farms to check on plants and help predict how much food will be harvested. The technology is moving beyond testing and into real use on actual farms.

However, farmers are worried about some challenges. They want to make sure they still understand how to farm without depending too much on technology. Farmers also worry about who controls their farm data and whether technology is affordable for smaller farms. As AI becomes more important in agriculture, the industry is working to balance the benefits of technology with the knowledge and experience that farmers have developed over many years.

Extended Coverage
From news to worker

Do not just read about agents. Build one that runs.

Create an agent from a short prompt, connect a gateway later, and pay mainly for active runtime.

No setup work4 gatewaysClone winnersState saved

Hosted agent

OpenClaw or Hermes

saved state
Browser
WhatsApp
Telegram
Slack
Generate setup files, upload prepared files, or launch from a marketplace kit. Stop, resume, clone, and rollback without losing memory.
Run an OpenClaw or Hermes agent without a server.
Open Agent Factory