ProAg highlights important factors in applying big data to irrigation
In irrigation systems, IoT works by placing sensors in the field, which gather information that is then sent to the cloud to be stored, analyzed and transformed into useful information. That information is then sent back to the field, sometimes to a producer’s cell phone and sometimes directly to another IoT device that controls other equipment.
“By having more data, and by receiving it more frequently, data scientists can apply sophisticated algorithms that reveal patterns and trends no individual sensor can reveal,” Hillyer said. “It’s not just one of these steps, it’s the whole process of getting all this to work together – that’s the basis of IoT. The idea is to make it easier to base decisions on data rather than intuition. But it will be new, something you are not accustomed to.”
Hillyer noted that producers need to ask questions of any vendors offering IoT products, centered on power supply, security and hardware.
“Producers need to know and understand how IoT solutions increase their accuracy,” he said. “Is the new information something you can act on or is it just informative? Can you make calculations based on the information? Are the data actual measurements or modeled information?”