NAPA, Calif. — Tom Gamble isn't just making wine; he's rethinking how it's made.

What You Need To Know • Technology, including artificial intelligence, is helping vineyards through self-driving tractors and data collection to detect disease and predict yields • The firm Scout, for example, uses cameras and AI to analyze every vine for performance, health and profitability • Farmers still make the decisions; AI just gives them better tools to do it

Gamble is the third generation to run his family's Napa Valley vineyard, Gamble Estates. But instead of looking back, he's leaning into the future with an artificial intelligence-powered electric tractor.

“We have seen a great deal of change, and I think the pace of technological change is accelerating,” Gamble said.

Gamble was an early

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