Every so often, you see a headline, and you think, "Way to reinforce stereotypes."
The headline, "Japanese Farmers Send Out Automated Laser Drones to Defend Chickens," is one of these heds.
It has a seriously dystopian robot anime vibe:
Chicken farming is a fowl business. To make it, you’ll need extensive knowledge in animal husbandry, business finance, biosecurity, and mechanical repair. If one company in Japan has its way, that list could soon include “drone skills” as well.
A Japanese firm called NTT e-Drone Technology Company Ltd has developed a drone-laser system designed to scare wild birds and other unwanted visitors away from chicken coops, as reported by tech blog Tom’s Hardware.
The quadcopter system sports a payload consisting of a laser-grid projector not unlike those chintzy Christmas light shows from 2019. When deployed, the drone automatically navigates toward unwanted nuisance animals before blasting them with a dazzling array of red and green lasers.
Also, it reminds me of a movie I saw a while back:


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