Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
CNH Industrial's precision agriculture connectivity platform; wireless data transfer between farm equipment and cloud eliminating SD card management for Case IH and New Holland operators.
Raven Slingshot (by CNH Industrial's Raven Industries division) is a precision agriculture connectivity platform that enables farmers to use existing cellular and wireless networks to share farm data between precision ag equipment, cloud services, and agronomic management platforms — eliminating the SD card data transfers and manual data management that have historically made precision agriculture workflows cumbersome. Raven Industries was acquired by CNH Industrial (the agricultural equipment conglomerate that owns Case IH and New Holland) in 2021 for $2.1 billion, integrating its precision agriculture technology with CNH's equipment brands.\n\nRaven Slingshot is specifically the wireless data management service within Raven's precision ag portfolio — enabling automatic prescription file delivery to equipment, real-time machine data uploads to the cloud, and seamless data flow between farm management software and field equipment without USB drives or manual downloads. The platform supports prescription-based variable rate application (where field sections receive different seeding rates, fertilizer rates, or chemical application rates based on soil maps) and connects to industry-standard formats used across precision agriculture equipment.\n\nIn 2025, Raven Slingshot operates within CNH Industrial's Agriculture Technology segment, competing with John Deere Operations Center (the dominant precision ag connectivity platform tied to John Deere equipment), Trimble Agriculture, and Climate Corporation for farm data connectivity. CNH's acquisition of Raven provided data and precision ag technology that case IH and New Holland equipment previously lacked relative to John Deere. The 2025 strategy focuses on integrating Raven Slingshot deeply with Case IH and New Holland equipment, expanding autonomous farming capabilities (Raven's autonomy stack for self-steering and autonomous field operations), and building third-party agronomic software partnerships.
Cambridge/Colorado trapped-ion quantum computing (Honeywell majority; $625M+/$5B valuation Jun 2024); Helios Nov 2025 at 98 physical/48 logical qubits with 99.9975% fidelity serving Amgen/BMW/JPMorgan competing with IBM Quantum.
Quantinuum is a Cambridge, UK and Broomfield, Colorado-based integrated quantum computing company — majority owned by Honeywell (NASDAQ: HON) with $625+ million in total funding including a $300 million round led by JPMorgan Chase at a $5 billion valuation in June 2024 — operating the world's most accurate commercial quantum computers using trapped-ion technology combined with quantum software from Cambridge Quantum. In November 2025, Quantinuum launched Helios, its third-generation quantum computer featuring 98 physical qubits and 48 logical error-corrected qubits with 99.9975% single-qubit gate fidelity and 99.921% two-qubit gate fidelity — the highest-accuracy general-purpose commercial quantum computer commercially available. Serving enterprise customers including Amgen (drug discovery), BMW Group (materials simulation), JPMorgan Chase (financial optimization), and SoftBank Corp. (AI acceleration), Quantinuum was formed in November 2021 through the merger of Honeywell Quantum Solutions and Cambridge Quantum Computing. CEO Ilyas Khan.
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