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Internet farming?  Could be, says UGA researcher

TIFTON, Ga. – Farmers will soon be able to open gates, track livestock, steer tractors and control other farm jobs by computer, says a University of Georgia researcher.

As more rural areas gain high-speed Internet access, a farmer could do all this and not even be on the farm, said Stuart Pocknee, a precision agriculture program coordinator with the UGA College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.

“A farmer could be out of the state at a meeting or even on vacation and pull up his farm’s Web page and farm,” said Pocknee, who works in the National Environmentally Sound Production Agriculture Laboratory in Tifton.

Internet farming seems a novel idea now. But it’s really not that far-fetched, Pocknee said.

Fast communication technology is already being used for many applications. Factory machinery can be accessed and controlled by a technology worker outside the factory. A person can call home to start or stop appliances or air-conditioning system. A simple home security system can call for help when it senses someone breaking in.

Technology may never replace some farming work, Pocknee said. But the tractor made farming easier and more efficient than the mule-driven rigs of the early 1900s. Modern communication technology could do the same in this century.

Wireless Internet communications have the greatest potential for on-farm use, he said. Wireless simply means ther’s no physical connection between a sender and the receiver. They’re connected by radio waves.

UGA’s precision agriculture team has pilot wireless communication projects established on farms now. One allows a farmer to remotely monitor his vegetable packing shed operation. Another will allow a farmer to do the same with his irrigation system.

UGA scientists and researchers nationwide will join wireless industry representatives at the Wireless Networking Forum June 16-17 on UGA’s campus in Tifton. They’ll discuss the future for this technology in agriculture.

“Only a few researchers are looking at this technology right now for agricultural use,” Pocknee said. “We want to bring those researchers together with wireless industry technology people to learn more of the potential of cutting-edge tools and what agriculture needs to make them work.”

Wireless technology products of the past haven’t transferred well to farm use, he said. But newer products have greater potential. They’re more versatile, inexpensive and easier to use.

Many variables have to be overcome on a farm, such as trees, hills and extended distances. But it can be done, he said, if there is an interest within the wireless industry and agriculture.

“We just want to raise our hand, in a manner of speaking, and let them know we’re here and that potential exists,” Pocknee said.