Posted on Sep 2, 2022
How weather in outer space could cost Midwestern farmers $1 billion
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Posted 2 y ago
Responses: 4
OK here s the thing. youcan still farm without GPS...We do it. We have old tractors and still make a good solid crop. Is it ideal in todays world, no but you can still do it...you just have to go back to old school and watch what you are doing versus letting a dang computer do it for you!
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
Lt Col Scott Shuttleworth But the Graphics on the New Stuff is "So Cool!" LOL!
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Lt Col Scott Shuttleworth
PO1 William "Chip" Nagel - yep...so cool and SO EXPENSIVE. A farmer friend of mine bought a new tractor a couple years back...his just finally died. This thing after the land coords are loaded will literally drive itself, turnoff spray booms if they have overlapped rows, has a mini fridge for lunch and drinks, and get this...one night he was sitting in his house getting ready fro be and got a text from his tractor telling him he left a light on...another time he got a text from the dealerhsip scheduling an oil change due to the hours used and would send a technician out. I have to listen to my tractors, monitor the gauges, and watch overlap. To me that is farming but I do get the efficiency thing especially on mega farms.
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MAJ Roland McDonald
Lt Col Scott Shuttleworth why didn't the tractor just turn the light out?.......oh right another 32 lines of code....that will 10k more in cost..... lol
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Farming is just one of many industries that are affected by the effects of solar flares. Hopefully the tech safeguards keep up to the safeguard requirements
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
CSM Chuck Stafford Hopefully! Not Many are Experienced in "Old School" Technology anymore. Bet I could still fire up an R-390 and Even with Arthritis starting to Show it's Ugly Face, Bet I could still make a Mod 28 TTY Sing!
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CSM Chuck Stafford
PO1 William "Chip" Nagel -reliance on "Chip" technology - no pun intended - is definitely a weakness in our society, which is increasingly losing the knowledge to do tasks in an analog manner
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"In the past, it was difficult for farmers to correlate production techniques and crop yields with land variability. This limited their ability to develop the most effective soil/plant treatment strategies that could have enhanced their production. Today, more precise application of pesticides, herbicides, and fertilizers, and better control of the dispersion of those chemicals are possible through precision agriculture, thus reducing expenses, producing a higher yield, and creating a more environmentally friendly farm."
https://www.gps.gov/applications/agriculture/
https://www.gps.gov/applications/agriculture/
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