Bloomberg Technology
Vertical Farming to Prevent Food Loss in a Disaster
Oct.16 — Indoor vertical farming startup Plenty Inc. is working to deliver year-round produce from its controlled, resilient farms to avoid food loss during disastrous flooding, droughts or fires. Matt Barnard, co-founder and chief executive officer of Plenty, Inc. discusses the company’s series D funding round on “Bloomberg Technology.”
Bloomberg Technology
Tech Stocks Rally on the Back of US-Iran Ceasefire Deal | Bloomberg Tech 4/8/2026
Bloomberg’s Caroline Hyde and Ed Ludlow discuss the rally in tech stocks and fall in energy prices as markets react to a two-week ceasefire deal between the US and Iran. Plus, Anthropic is giving tech firms early access to its new Mythos model to get ahead of possible cyberattacks that could wreak havoc. And, Apple’s…
Bloomberg Technology
Snowflake Seeing Strong Return on AI Investment: CEO
Some of Snowflake’s coders are producing work 24 hours a day using AI agents, says CEO Sridhar Ramaswamy. He joins Caroline Hyde and Ed Ludlow on “Bloomberg Tech.” ——– Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg Technology on YouTube: Watch the latest full episodes of “Bloomberg Technology” with Caroline Hyde and Ed Ludlow here: …
Bloomberg Technology
Apple’s Foldable Phone On Track for September Launch
Apple’s first foldable phone is still on track to launch in September, despite reports of major manufacturing delays. Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman discusses the phone’s features and why it could mark a big shift in the foldable market. He joins Caroline Hyde and Ed Ludlow on “Bloomberg Tech.” ——– Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg Technology…
-
Science & Technology6 years agoNitya Subramanian: Products and Protocol
-
People & Blogs4 years agoSleep Expert Answers Questions From Twitter ???? | Tech Support | WIRED
-
CNET6 years agoWays you can help Black Lives Matter movement (links, orgs, and more) ????????
-
Wired7 years agoHow This Guy Became a World Champion Boomerang Thrower | WIRED
-
Wired7 years agoNeuroscientist Explains ASMR’s Effects on the Brain & The Body | WIRED
-
Wired7 years agoWhy It’s Almost Impossible to Solve a Rubik’s Cube in Under 3 Seconds | WIRED
-
Wired7 years agoFormer FBI Agent Explains How to Read Body Language | Tradecraft | WIRED
-
CNET6 years agoSurface Pro 7 review: Hello, old friend ????

wrecked bote
October 16, 2020 at 11:44 pm
This just made me think about how regulated marijuana is influencing farm innovation. Like a farm. So it has a utility for that
wrecked bote
October 17, 2020 at 1:49 am
I think this is hilarious but for all the liberals we should create phage therapy because it’s like whole foodsy. Instead of antibiotics because all the liberal anti antibiotic people I guess they’d be probiotic! all the people that make the fast food places say they cause cancer and reproductive harm, from my knowledge you don’t get trisomy 21 from acrylamides. I don’t know why that’s there It scares people
wrecked bote
October 17, 2020 at 1:49 am
I kind of question if it’s the Michelle Obama administration’s harsh dieting policies. If I go to McDonald’s I can give that to a pregnant woman. There’s no reason I couldn’t do that.
wrecked bote
October 17, 2020 at 1:54 am
I mean it doesn’t even make any sense because all cooked food has acrylamides so am I supposed to be on a raw food diet if I’m a pregnant woman? I understand pregnant women should eat healthy but why doesn’t it state that, That’s my question?
zbLoodlust087
October 17, 2020 at 12:51 am
I’ve been talking about this forever now!
Ankit Singh
October 17, 2020 at 2:09 am
This is very expensive every farmer can’t afford it
Rick Ramos
October 17, 2020 at 12:41 pm
Every farm can’t, this is an alternative to traditional farms and will only be cost effective for specific produce. You aren’t gonna see corn or soy being grown this way for decades.
Ankit Singh
October 17, 2020 at 3:22 pm
@Rick Ramos yes that’s the problem u can grow only some vegetables and fruits how will then grow grains..as the land is loosing its fertility…future there will be food disaster surely
Eric bee
October 17, 2020 at 2:36 am
just need to find away to lower power costs and this might be a good idea
Spencer Williams
October 18, 2020 at 5:15 pm
renewable energy into the grid.
Abhishek Sharma
October 17, 2020 at 6:19 am
Do you think packed veggies keeps getting recalled ??? Even though I eat packed veggies as they are cost effective, but I prefer fresh veggies
Yellowowl Nighteagle
October 17, 2020 at 1:55 pm
They still don’t get it right though. Although I see some potential to vertical growth, I still see these vegetables being alone and isolated. The American Indian traditionalist would teach you that vegetables grow better in groups. But it takes a lot of knowledge that only they can provide. For example, if you grow grapes with a certain type of tree, not only will they offer more nutrition, the grapes will be twice the size you see them in grocery stores. Not like tomatoes “alone”, but with carrots, or cabbage, or whatever it is they told me. They are the ones with this knowledge and they are dying off because noone will ask them to share this knowledge they have had for thousands upon thousands of years. Everyone continues to listen to new-age farmers that do not grow foods for their local communities, but for a global market so that they can be millionaires. And they plant their foods in the same manner that they plant their dead in cemetaries; in plots and in rows. Don’t take my word on it, ask someone from Red-Hat A.I.M.
Yellowowl Nighteagle
October 17, 2020 at 2:01 pm
Also, innovation does not provide “sustainable life”. The plants are alive, not the plastics holding it. Flora are “seed-bearing”, not the technology. All the inovation provides is a multi-tiered growing platform, which IS smart, but it is still the fruits and vegetables that are sustainable because they are “renewable”. They are part of the “circle” of life.
Jspath3
October 17, 2020 at 8:14 pm
Not every farmer is a botonist unfortunately.