farming Archives - 小蓝视频色情网页版 News /tag/farming/ Data-driven reporting on private markets, startups, founders, and investors Mon, 28 Nov 2022 20:36:00 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.5 /wp-content/uploads/cb_news_favicon-150x150.png farming Archives - 小蓝视频色情网页版 News /tag/farming/ 32 32 Special Series Part 4: From Wigs To Fish, Some Very Quirky AI Startups Got Funded In 2022 /ai-robotics/venture-funding-ai-startups-series/ Tue, 29 Nov 2022 13:30:10 +0000 /?p=85882 Editor鈥檚 note: This story is the final part of our four-part series on artificial intelligence startups and their impact on multiple sectors. In Part One, we analyzed VC investment in AI over the last decade. Part Two looked at the billions of dollars rolling into AI-enhanced cybersecurity. Part Three explored AI鈥檚 promise to transform medical imaging technology. 鈥 Special Projects Editor Christine Kilpatrick

For years now, startup investors have been busily writing checks to founders applying artificial intelligence in creative new ways to their respective industries.

That momentum continued in 2022, with investors signing on to back some rather quirky applications of AI technology.听

How quirky? Using 小蓝视频色情网页版 data, we assembled a list of some of the more unusual-seeming models. If they pan out, expect a future where AI-enabled tech can customize your wig, cut your meat, sort your trash and track lice on your fish farm. (If you have a fish farm, that is.)

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Without further ado, here are six recently funded or launched AI endeavors applying technology in surprising ways:

Customize your wig: New York startup has seen the AI future, and it鈥檚 all about making wigs. The company raised $5 million in April, with tennis star listed as a backer. Parfait uses artificial intelligence to capture a client鈥檚 exact measurements and skin tone when crafting its wigs. The company鈥檚 goal is to speed up the process and significantly cut costs for producing high-quality custom wigs, which usually cost upward of $2,000 and take months to make.

Upgrade your skincare: Estonian startup is applying artificial intelligence technology to the pressing task of figuring out which skincare products work best. The company, which counts and among its partners, operates an AI engine trained on millions of face and skin images to match users to appropriate products based on over 14 skin health and beauty metrics.

Give you a good night鈥檚 sleep: makes high-tech mattresses optimized for restorative rest by tracking sleep duration, stages and efficiency. In July, the Silicon Valley company pulled in $20 million in a round led by mattressmaker .

Be your friend: , an app that makes digital avatars that interact with people in the role of friend and confidant, has drawn over 10 million users in its few short years of existence. As users chat with the avatar, the AI learns more about them and improves its ability to provide personalized responses. VC-funded mental health app , which is also AI-powered, functions more as a mental health tool 鈥 it 鈥渓istens,鈥 asks questions and makes recommendations. Both startups join several other AI tools that purport to offer the kind of emotional support and interpersonal interaction one usually expects from a human.听

Keep your fish healthy: If you鈥檙e a fish farmer, AI technology can help deliver healthier fish at lower cost. That鈥檚 the pitch from , a 5-year-old Norwegian startup that raised $25 million in a July Series B round and counts as a backer. Aquabyte uses AI to scale adoption of tools that enable automatic lice counting, welfare scoring and biomass control, among other data-driven offerings. Meanwhile, another aquaculture-focused AI startup, Norway鈥檚 , also scored funding this year, pulling in $6 million in an August Series A.

Warn about a flood: In recent quarters, we鈥檝e been seeing a good bit of venture investment directed at weather-related startups. Now, one AI-focused startup is promising better tools to predict one of the most worrisome of weather developments: flooding. , calls its offering an AI- and satellite-powered technology that can track floods in near real time anywhere on Earth. To further this effort, the New York-based company pulled in $12 million in Series A funding in September.

Methodology

The dataset for the funding analysis includes companies categorized by 小蓝视频色情网页版 as one of several sectors tied to fintech and financial services. Companies included in the results may be fully financial services-focused or include financial services as a significant focus of their business models. Funding rounds included in the results totaled at least $200,000 and included companies founded no more than 20 years prior to the funding.

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Indoor Farming Startup Gotham Greens Raises $310M /agtech-foodtech/fundraising-indoor-farming-startup-gotham-greens/ Mon, 12 Sep 2022 19:02:49 +0000 /?p=85311 New York-based , an indoor farming startup, announced on Monday it raised a whopping $310 million in Series E funding led by BMO Impact Fund and . Gotham Greens has raised $440 million since it launched in 2009.

The company, which sells leafy greens grown in hydroponics-equipped greenhouses, will use the funding to support its goal of delivering basil, butterhead lettuce and romaine to grocery stores such as and within a day of harvesting.听

Gotham Green鈥檚 goal is to have 13 locations across nine states by 2023. So far the company is building new greenhouses in Texas, Colorado and Georgia, in addition to existing greenhouses in Chicago and Providence.听

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It also uses hydroponics, an agricultural phenomenon that allows plants to grow virtually anywhere and anytime. The roots grow in nutrient-rich water sans soil, saving acres of rolling, fertile farmlands that degrade over time and become less suitable for crops. Per Gotham Greens, using hydroponics in their greenhouses allows them to use 97% less land when compared to farming.听

鈥淲ith increasing climate and supply chain-related issues facing our food system, it鈥檚 more important than ever to bring innovative farming solutions that grow high-quality produce while using fewer precious natural resources,鈥 co-founder and CEO said in a statement.

Part of the agtech craze

Gotham Greens鈥 $310 million deal is the second-largest series raise so far this year in the sector. , the San Francisco-based indoor farming company, raised a $400 million Series E in January with the help of and

According to 小蓝视频色情网页版 data, startups in the vertical farming space raised a record $1.1 billion in 2021 and only $826 million so far this year. But urgency in climate change and COVID-related supply chain issues is bringing agricultural technology to the forefront of urban-minded venture investors.

And while vertical farming cuts down on transportation costs, requires less labor than traditional farming, and saves arable soil, it鈥檒l take more than that to address the plethora of the U.S. drought-related farming issues. Only a limited number of crops can be grown using vertical farming methods (largely leafy greens), and setting up the greenhouses requires large upfront costs.听

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