In a tweet Fawad Chaudhry said, “Both of these agricultural drones was made in Pakistan, capable of spraying 16 liters (pesticide) for 18 minutes, first the entire field is sprayed now censors say which part of the crop is diseased and only this part should be sprayed, full surveillance of the field. Drones will be a modern development in agriculture
— Ch Fawad Hussain (@fawadchaudhry) July 14, 2020 He further expressed his confidence in manufacturing cricket balls locally. He said, Pakistan is capable of of producing smart cricket balls besides other quality sports goods. In 2019 a collaboration between Kookaburra Sports and SportCor (which takes a standard Kookaburra cricket ball and embeds a Sport Cor electronic chip within the center of the ball) led to the development of Kookaburra Smart Ball. According to published reports, it is still in the testing phase and not used for international cricket matches. The chip inside the core transmits information from the ball back to a phone or app.
The sensor will actually calculate the pace and revolutions of the ball at various points of its trajectory from the hand of a bowler and even gather data that will boost monitoring for Decision Review System (DRS). According to Kookaburra company the new ball will change the way cricket is coached, played, officiated, and experienced.