The verdant fields are flourishing, and spring plowing is in full swing. On April 7th, a reporter visited the Kokdala City, Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps Fourth Division, at the Runtai Agricultural Science and Technology Development Co., Ltd.'s Smart Agriculture Park, where the scene was quite different from the imagined spring plowing scenario: there were no muddy ridges, no farmers sweating profusely, but instead, there were clear glass greenhouses, neatly arranged soilless coir strips, 48,000 thriving tomato seedlings, and an invisible data network. With soilless cultivation and hands never touching fertilizer, where does the strength of this modern agricultural "fruit factory" come from? "Here, farming does not rely on experience, but entirely on data," explained Yue Junfeng, the park's technical director. Entering the control center, data on various environmental indicators such as temperature, humidity, and carbon dioxide were updated in real-time on the large ...