Farming the Web of Things

Author(s)
Taylor, Kerry
Griffith, Colin
Lefort, Laurent
Gaire, Raj
Compton, Michael
Wark, Tim
Lamb, David
Falzon, Gregory
Trotter, Mark
Publication Date
2013
Abstract
Primary industry in Australia has a proud record of both remarkable productivity and investment in innovation. The combine harvester, for example, revolutionized broad-acre crop production after its first commercial production in Australia in 1885. Today, there are new economic pressures driving a new round of information-based innovation, this time aligned with the technology push called the 'Web of Things'. Since 1999, it has been mandatory for all Australian farmer to affix passive RFID ear tags to their cattle and to report movements between farms to a national database. Now, the first commercial systems for on-farm livestock location tracking are emerging; the Taggle system, for example, triangulates wireless signals from active ear tags as they are received at base station antennae. A national broadband network is being developed to deliver telephony and high-speed broadband to all Australian homes, schools, and businesses, including rural farms. Farming "things" are becoming electronically identifiable and measureable, but the "Web" that connects and adds value is largely unexplored.
Citation
IEEE Intelligent Systems, 28(6), p. 12-19
ISSN
1941-1294
1541-1672
Link
Language
en
Publisher
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
Title
Farming the Web of Things
Type of document
Journal Article
Entity Type
Publication

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