logo
FPOs must harness tech to boost farm income: Collector

FPOs must harness tech to boost farm income: Collector

Hans India3 days ago
Tirupati: District Collector Dr S Venkateswar urged Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs) to embrace modern technology to maximise income and transform agriculture into a profitable venture.
Speaking at a review meeting at the Collectorate on Thursday, he said the administration was actively working to support FPOs by facilitating access to bank loans and subsidies to procure advanced agricultural machinery.
The Collector said that FPOs should fully utilise government schemes and policies to drive their growth. 'We will take appropriate measures based on a clear understanding of FPO operations and their needs,' he assured. Calling for coordinated action from all departments, he stressed the goal of making farming a viable livelihood for farmers. A key highlight of the meeting was the emphasis on the use of drones and other smart technologies to enhance agricultural productivity. Dr Venkateswar noted the need to diversify cropping patterns, encouraging farmers to cultivate millets in addition to traditional crops. He noted that horticulture crops were currently generating higher returns than traditional agriculture, and instructed officials to ensure both sectors are equally remunerative.
As part of a broader push towards tech-driven farming, the Collector announced workshops for agriculture and allied department officials on emerging tools like Agri Stack and Artificial Intelligence (AI). He explained that Agri Stack was a unified digital repository that integrates key datasets such as farmer registries, geo-referenced village maps, and crop sown data. These datasets, unified through the Unified Farmer Service Interface, can be securely accessed by banks, insurance companies, agri-tech firms and government agencies.
'AI, when integrated with these datasets, has the power to radically transform farming practices,' he said, citing applications like multilingual chatbots, precision farming tools, real-time analytics, and image-based pest and disease diagnostics.
He also unveiled a new mobile interface named APAIMS, designed to serve as a one-stop digital platform for farmers. This interface provides a host of services, including pest alerts through crop photo mapping and relevant spray recommendations. Joint Collector Shubham Bansal, District Agriculture Officer S Prasad Rao, District Horticulture Officer B Dasharatha Rami Reddy, Animal Husbandry Officer A Ravi Kumar and other senior officials attended the meeting.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rediff plans to raise $100 mn to expand email, payments services
Rediff plans to raise $100 mn to expand email, payments services

Business Standard

time10 minutes ago

  • Business Standard

Rediff plans to raise $100 mn to expand email, payments services

Internet company Rediff is exploring options, including an initial public offering, to raise up to $ 100 million (around ₹875 crore) to accelerate its push into enterprise-grade email, business productivity suite and digital payments, according to sources. The company, which is majority owned by financial technology company Infibeam Avenues Ltd, is considering options such as launching an IPO, private placement, or through private equity participation to raise capital, sources privy to the development said. The board of is currently evaluating fundraising options and is expected to finalize the structure in the coming weeks, they said. However, the IPO option has a high chance of being chosen by management for its $ 100 million fundraising, sources said. When contacted, Rediff Senior Vice-President for Corporate Development, Ashish Mehrota, said, Yes, our company explores various fundraising options from time to time. At this stage, we do not have anything specific to share, but we are evaluating options. Sources said that the company will use the funds to accelerate its push into enterprise-grade email and business productivity suite -RediffOne, and digital payment - RediffPay. Infibeam has been investing aggressively in data centres, AI platforms, and now, sovereign digital services all areas where Rediff is expected to play a central role, sources said. The firm had launched its AI-powered productivity suite RediffOne last year and looks to offer similar services that global majors like Microsoft, Google, and Zoho are offering, sources said. While almost all major productivity suites Microsoft 365, Google Workspace, and Zoho are headquartered in the US or elsewhere in the West, Rediff remains the only large-scale Indian player in this category. The company claims over 20,000 businesses currently use Rediffmail Enterprise, in addition to millions of individual users on its flagship email platform.

AI vs jobs: What Vinod Khosla, Sundar Pichai, Satya Nadella, other tech leaders really think
AI vs jobs: What Vinod Khosla, Sundar Pichai, Satya Nadella, other tech leaders really think

India Today

time38 minutes ago

  • India Today

AI vs jobs: What Vinod Khosla, Sundar Pichai, Satya Nadella, other tech leaders really think

The rise of AI is making global headlines, but with its growth, there's also a growing concern: what will happen to jobs? Will AI take over human roles, or will it help people work better? Over the past few months, some of the biggest names in the tech world, including Vinod Khosla, Sundar Pichai, Satya Nadella, and others, have spoken publicly about what they think AI means for the future of work. While opinions differ slightly, there is one common theme: AI will deeply change how people work across Khosla warns of a major shake-up in India's IT sectorIndian-American venture capitalist Vinod Khosla has been particularly vocal about the possible dangers AI poses to India's traditional tech industry. Speaking on a podcast hosted by Zerodha co-founder Nikhil Kamath, Khosla said that business process outsourcing (BPO), a sector that employs lakhs of Indians, could disappear in its current form. In his words, 'BPO as a business will disappear.'Khosla didn't stop at BPO. He also pointed out that even IT services, which have been a backbone for India's economy, will need a massive overhaul. 'Software IT services will mostly disappear. Disappear means transform pretty radically,' he said. According to him, whether these companies survive or not will depend on how quickly and efficiently they change. In another podcast, Khosla compared today's AI-driven technological change to what happened during the 1960s, but said the pace now is far more intense. 'I've never seen a cycle like this,' he added, highlighting how AI is transforming almost every job and even physical believes that in just a few years, AI will be able to handle 80 per cent of most human jobs. 'Within the next five years, any economically valuable job humans can do, AI will be able to do 80% of it.' Khosla predicts that by 2040, most people may not need to work to earn a living and may instead take up work only for personal CEO sees AI improving work, not replacing workersWhile Khosla's warning was rather sharp, Alphabet and Google CEO Sundar Pichai had a more balanced view. Speaking with Lex Fridman on his podcast, Pichai said that AI tools are already helping Google engineers write code. He revealed that about 30 per cent of code at Google now uses AI assistance in some Pichai pointed out that AI hasn't slowed down hiring. On the contrary, he said Google is planning to hire more software engineers because the scope of what AI allows them to do is growing. He said that thanks to AI, the company has seen a 10 per cent increase in engineering speed. 'Our estimates are that number is now at 10 per cent,' Pichai said, referring to the improvement in also mentioned that engineers enjoy more freedom now as AI handles the repetitive parts of the job, which allows them to focus on problem-solving and design work — tasks that many find more Nadella focuses on changing how people work, not just what they doMicrosoft CEO Satya Nadella has been stressing another important point — while AI tools are improving fast, the bigger challenge is helping people adapt their work a fireside chat hosted by Y Combinator, Nadella said that when people start working with AI systems like agents that can carry out tasks on their behalf, it forces a change in how jobs are done. He explained that as AI takes over more routine work, the very nature of roles and responsibilities will pointed to changes already happening within Microsoft's ecosystem. For example, at LinkedIn (which Microsoft owns), the company is merging different roles like product design, engineering, and management into a single position known as the "full-stack builder." This shows how job definitions are being updated in response to what AI makes like many other companies, has been restructuring its workforce. In May, it announced plans to cut around 6,000 jobs. Though the company clarified that the move wasn't based on employee performance, reports suggested that the goal was to trim middle management and ensure more direct involvement of engineers in boss says all jobs will feel the impactNvidia CEO Jensen Huang offered a realistic but hopeful view. While he admitted that many jobs will be affected and some might disappear, he was confident that AI will also create new roles."Everybody's jobs will be affected. Some jobs will be lost. Many jobs will be created,' he said. His company makes the powerful chips that power AI tools, so he's been at the centre of this revolution. According to him, AI will make many tasks faster and cheaper, which may reduce the need for some workers, but at the same time open up new opportunities in areas like AI development, data science, and high-end also expressed hope that AI-led growth could benefit the economy in a way that ultimately helps all sections of will take over coding fast, says Anthropic CEODario Amodei, the CEO of AI firm Anthropic, is among those who believe AI is moving extremely quickly in specific fields, especially software engineering. Speaking at an event by the Council on Foreign Relations, Amodei said AI could be writing 90 per cent of code within the next three to six months. He went on to say that in a year's time, AI might be able to handle almost all coding a prediction, if it holds true, could upend how companies approach software development, making human programmers more like supervisors than actual Kevin Weil expects AI to become your digital teammateKevin Weil, who serves as Chief Product Officer at OpenAI, made a similar prediction. On a podcast called Overpowered, he said he wouldn't be surprised if AI could take over most coding tasks even before 2027. Weil believes the way AI models are improving, it's only a matter of time before almost anyone, not just trained engineers, can build software using AI he added that this doesn't mean human workers will vanish. Instead, people will work closely with AI, using it like an assistant that can handle the basic tasks. 'People are going to increasingly be sort of managers of these AI employees,' he CEO Sam Altman agrees the future may need fewer software engineersOpenAI's CEO Sam Altman, who leads the company behind ChatGPT, also weighed in on the topic. In a conversation with tech analyst Ben Thompson on Stratechery, Altman said that AI is already doing a large chunk of the coding in many companies. 'I think in many companies, it's probably past 50 per cent now,' he expects that engineers will become far more productive in the near term. But eventually, the number of engineers needed may go down, depending on how fast AI improves. He added that the next big leap will come with "agentic coding," a term referring to AI systems that can work almost like autonomous developers.- Ends

Bharti Airtel's arm launches sovereign cloud for enterprises; partners Singtel, Globe Telecom, Airtel Africa
Bharti Airtel's arm launches sovereign cloud for enterprises; partners Singtel, Globe Telecom, Airtel Africa

Time of India

time41 minutes ago

  • Time of India

Bharti Airtel's arm launches sovereign cloud for enterprises; partners Singtel, Globe Telecom, Airtel Africa

NEW DELHI: Bharti Airtel 's fully-owned subsidiary, Xtelify , on Monday launched the ' Airtel Cloud ' platform for enterprises in India. The telecom company also launched an artificial intelligence (AI)-powered software platform that will enable telcos to alleviate underlying challenges of cloud migration, improve customer experience and improve average revenue per user (ARPU). Airtel Cloud presently handles 140 crore transactions per minute for the Sunil Mittal-led telco in India, however, it has been made available to enterprises in the country. 'Hosted on next-gen sustainable data centres, with Gen-AI based provisioning, and managed by 300 certified cloud experts, the highly secure and reliable Airtel Cloud offers IaaS, PaaS and advanced connectivity and guarantees secure migration, effortless scaling, lower costs and no vendor lock-ins,' Airtel said. Xtelify also signed partnerships with three global telecom carriers, under which, it will deploy the Xtelify Work for Singtel , Xtelify Serve for Globe Telecom , and Xtelify Data Engine, Work and IQ for Airtel Africa . The software platform, meanwhile, addresses every layer of the telecom value chain, and comes with a converged data engine for AI-led insights and intelligence at scale, a workfroce platform for real-time task streamlining and an experience platform for managing every element of the customer journey for a telco. Xtelify houses all of Airtel's digital capabilities, including AI-backed Airtel Cloud, Xtelify Work, Xtelify Data Engine, Xtelify Serve, and Xtelify IQ, backed by a 24x7 managed services hub in Pune. 'It is a very pivotal moment in our history as we take our world-class, homegrown platforms of Airtel Cloud and software solutions to businesses in India and telcos all over the world. We are privileged to have signed on partnerships with three top-tier companies already - Singtel, Globe Telecom, and Airtel Africa,' said Gopal Vittal, vice-chairman & managing director, Bharti Airtel. According to Vittal, Airtel has been harnessing digital innovations at scale to transform its services and enhance customer experiences, which has involved powering over 590 million customer touchpoints and solving complex telecom challenges. 'Today, we are also excited to take our telco-grade, sovereign-cloud platform and help businesses in India innovate faster, scale smarter and stay secure in today's rapidly-evolving digital landscape,' he added. 'We are always looking for ways to better equip our field engineers so we can deliver the best possible experiences to our customers. This platform enables us to reimagine our workflows with AI at the core, improving both efficiency and customer service,' said Ng Tian Chong, CEO, Singtel Singapore. Carl Cruz, president & CEO, Globe Telecom, said, 'By integrating Xtelify's AI-powered Case Management Platform into our operations, we bring to life our commitment to best-in-class service across every journey, from the first touchpoint to final resolution. This transformation enables a more seamless and transparent experience for our customers, where concerns are addressed with clarity, accountability, and genuine care.' 'We are excited to have Xtelify as a core technology partner, enabling us to deliver meaningful digital advancements and enriching the lives of millions across Africa,' said Jacques Barkhuizen, group chief information officer (CIO), Airtel Africa.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store