Farmer Tech: Springtime Is Here : EasyBloom Plant Sensor
By Kate Gammon , published on April 20, 2009 at 1:30 PM
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Want to go from gardening zero to hero in no time flat? The EasyBloom Plant Sensor might just turn you into an aspiring backyard farmer. The system (which costs about $60) comes in two pieces: a USB-enabled processor and a sensor that you stick into the soil that the processor can read. The in-ground sensor can give you a good picture of what your plants want and need by reading the amount of sunlight that location receives and the moisture, humidity, and drainage. After a day of operation, just pop the sensor into your computer’s USB port and you’ll get a list of plants that would thrive in your particular location. It even allows you to search based on color or height of your desired garden. |
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Nifty stuff. Its nice to see how modern tech is making its way into the different fields such as agriculture. (no pun intended)
14 : watermill is just a de-humidifier.. nothing special been around for YEARS... got one in my basement i use every spring to help dry up after rain & flood season. Can create probably a gallon of water...
LOL at the donkey wagon....The Plant sensor, however, seems like a good idea for beginner gardeners.
I didn't understand the Donkey Wagon at all. Why can't you just use the solar panels to charge the cell phone. It's a wagon with a solar panel. Is it lighter than other wagons or anything? It looks like it has nice tires.
openair: Better use a white bedsheet!
Electricity storage: What if the tank explodes? About 30MWatts of compressed air can cause devastating destruction!
Electricity storage: What if the tank explodes? About 30MWatts of compressed air can cause devastating destruction!
They aren't using a tank, they're using an underground aqueduct (or some other natural structure). Since it will be a few hundred (or thousand) feet below the surface, they'd have to build up some extreme pressure to do more than blow a vent hole (maybe Iowa will soon have its own Old Faithful?). I also don't think its going to be a high-pressure system, probably only a few PSI at best.
14 : watermill is just a de-humidifier.. nothing special been around for YEARS... got one in my basement i use every spring to help dry up after rain & flood season. Can create probably a gallon of water...
Agreed. I was raised in the SW desert, so when I visited the east coast the concept of de-humidifying something was completely foerign to me, but yeah, they've been around forever.
I am currently working on making a virtuel hortibot simulator, using MS Robotic Developer Studio
Check it out if you like
www.youtube.com/CornIsKing