The other Dyson empire, measured in acres

https://media.thenextweb.com/2026/07/Dyson.avif

Inside a glasshouse the size of roughly 20 football pitches, on the flat black soil of Lincolnshire, strawberry plants ride a Ferris wheel. The wheels stand about 5.5 metres tall, and each one weighs close to half a tonne. They turn slowly, all day, carrying their rows of fruit through the light like carriages at a fairground, so no leaf is left in shadow for long. When a berry ripens, no hand reaches for it.

A sixteen robotic arms do the picking, guided by cameras that read each strawberry for colour, size, and shape before the secateurs close. At night, once the human pickers have gone, other robots move down the aisles under ultraviolet light, burning off mould without a drop of chemical.

In one month, the machines picked 200,000 strawberries. And the company that built all of this sells the vacuum in your cupboard.

This is usually where the...

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