Think artificial intelligence and you might picture massive data centers fueling rocketing returns in the stock market.
But in Pittsburgh, AI also means agriculture, where farm equipment mounted cameras can turn thousands of images into real-time intelligence to guide crop cultivation and harvesting. AI in farming can also improve worker productivity, which is among agriculture’s biggest challenges.
“We solve a problem that farmers have been working on since there was farming,” said Hayden Wolf, president and CEO of startup Bloomfield Robotics. “They need information about what’s happening in the field.”…