|  “Precision  farming,” also known as site-specific management, describes a bundle of new  information technologies applied to the management of large-scale, commercial  agriculture. Precision farming technologies include, for example: personal  computers, satellite-positioning systems, geographic information systems,  automated machine guidance, remote sensing devices and  telecommunications.   A  Brief Case Study of Precision Farming“It is 5 a.m. A Midwest farmer sips coffee in  front of a computer. Up-to-the-minute satellite images show a weed problem in  a field on the north-west corner of the farm. At 6:30 a.m., the farmer drives  to the exact location to apply a precise amount of herbicide.” - Illinois  Laboratory for Agricultural Remote Sensing press release.   How Does  Precision Farming Work?Precision farming relies upon intensive  sensing of environmental conditions and computer processing of the resulting  data to inform decision-making and control farm machinery. Precision farming  technologies typically connect global positioning systems (GPS) with  satellite imaging of fields to remotely sense crop pests or evidence of  drought, and then automatically adjust levels of irrigation or pesticide  applications as the tractor moves around the field. Yield monitors fitted to  combine harvesters measure the amount and moisture levels of grains as they  are harvested on different parts of a field, generating computer models that  will guide decisions about application or timing of inputs.  What  are the Benefits of Precision Agriculture?Precision agriculture promises higher  yields and lower input costs by streamlining agricultural management and  thereby reducing waste and labour costs. It also offers the potential to  employ less skilled, and therefore cheaper, farm machinery operators since,  theoretically, such systems can simplify and centralize decision-making. In  the future, precision farming will resemble robotic farming as farm machinery  is designed to operate autonomously, continuously adapting to incoming data.   The  Role of Networks of Wireless Nanosensors in Precision FarmingIf they function as designed, ubiquitous wireless sensors will  become an essential tool for bringing this vision of precision farming to  maturity. When scattered on fields, networked sensors are expected to provide  detailed data on crop and soil conditions and relay that information in real  time to a remote location so that crop scouting will no longer require the  farmer (or agribusiness executive) to get their boots dirty. Since many of  the conditions that a farmer may want to monitor (e.g., the presence of plant  viruses or the level of soil nutrients) operate at the nano-scale, and  because surfaces can be altered at the nano-scale to bind selectively with  particular biological proteins, sensors with nano-scale sensitivity will be  particularly important in realizing this vision. ‘Smart  Fields’ Monitored by Wireless Nanosensors and the USA’s Plans for a ‘Smart  Field System’Leading the choir of enthusiasm for “smart fields” laced with  wireless nanosensors is the US Department of Agriculture (USDA). In what they  originally dubbed “Little Brother Technology,” the agency identifies  agricultural sensor development as one of their most important research  priorities. The USDA is working to promote and develop a total “Smart Field  System” that automatically detects, locates, reports and applies water,  fertilisers and pesticides - going beyond sensing to automatic  application.     Which  Companies are Developing Wireless Sensor Networks for the Agricultural  Sector?Industry is already experimenting with wireless sensor networks  for agriculture. Computer chip maker Intel, whose chips have nano-scale  features, has installed larger wireless sensor nodes (called ‘motes’)  throughout a vineyard in Oregon, USA. The sensors measure temperature once  every minute and are the first step towards fully automating the vineyard.  Intel also employs ethnographers and social scientists who study behaviour of  vineyard workers to help design the system. Intel’s vision for wireless networks  is ‘proactive computing’ - ubiquitous systems that anticipate the needs of  the farmer and act before they are asked to do so. In a similar venture,  multinational consulting firm Accenture has partnered with mote-maker  Millennial Net to run a network of sensors across a vineyard in California. According  to Crossbow Technologies, their motes can be used on the farm for irrigation  management, frost detection and warning, pesticide application, harvest  timing, bio-remediation and containment, and water quality measurement and  control.  What  is ‘Smart Dust’ and Who Invented This Technology?The idea that thousands of tiny sensors could be scattered like  invisible eyes, ears and noses across farm fields and battlefields sounds  like science fiction. But ten years ago, Kris Pister, a professor of Robotics  at University of California Berkeley secured funding from the US Defense Advanced Research Projects  Agency (DARPA) to develop autonomous sensors that would each be the size of a  match head. Using silicon-etching technology, these motes (“smart dust”  sensors) would feature an onboard power supply, computation abilities and the  ability to detect and then communicate with other motes in the vicinity. In  this way the individual motes would self-organize into ad hoc computer  networks capable of relaying data using wireless (i.e., radio) technology.  Potential  Industry Applications for ‘Smart Dust’ NetworksDARPA’s immediate interest in the project was to deploy smart dust  networks over enemy terrain to feed back real time news about troop  movements, chemical weapons and other battlefield conditions without having  to risk soldiers’ lives. However, like that other groundbreaking DARPA  project, the Internet, it swiftly became clear that tiny surveillance systems  would have endless civilian uses, from monitoring energy-use in office  buildings to tracking goods through a supply chain to environmental data monitoring.   Industry  Says that Wireless Nanosensors Will Play a Massive Part in Future Everyday  LifeToday, wireless micro and nanosensors like the ones pioneered by  Kris Pister are an area of intense research for large corporations from Intel  to Hitachi, a focus of development at all US national defence laboratories,  and in fields as wide apart as medicine, energy and communications. Touted by  ‘The Economist’, ‘Red Herring’ and ‘Technology Review’ as the  ‘next big thing,’ ubiquitous wireless sensors embedded in everything from the  clothes we wear to the landscapes we move through could fundamentally alter  the way we relate to everyday goods, services, the environment and the State.   What is  ‘Ambient Intelligence’?The aim is to develop what researches call ‘ambient intelligence’  - smart environments that use sensors and artificial intelligence to predict  the needs of individuals and respond accordingly: offices that adjust light  and heating levels throughout the day or clothes that alter their colours or  warmth depending on the external environment. A simple example of ambient  intelligence already in use is an airbag system in newer cars, which “senses”  an imminent crash and deploys a pillow to soften the blow to the driver.    How  Might ‘Ambient Intelligence’ Be Used in Future Nano Products?Kris Pister’s dust motes are currently  far from nano (they are roughly coin-sized), but they have already been  licensed to commercial companies. In 2003 Pister established a “smart dust”  spin-off company, Dust, Inc. For a light taster of a society steeped in  ambient intelligence, Kris Pister makes the following speculations:   •        “In 2010 a speck of dust on  each of your fingernails will continuously transmit fingertip motion to your  computer. Your computer will understand when you type, point, click, gesture,  sculpt, or play air guitar.  •        In 2010 infants will not die  of SIDs (Sudden Infant Death Syndrome), or suffocate, or drown, without an  alert being sent to the parents. How will society change when your neighbor’s  pool calls your cell phone to tell you that Johnny is drowning and you’re the  closest adult that could be located?  •        In 2020 there will be no  unanticipated illness. Chronic sensor implants will monitor all of the major  circulator systems in the human body, and provide you with early warning of  an impending flu, or save your life by catching cancer early enough that it  can be completely removed surgically.”  ‘Smart  Dust’: Companies Who Manufacture It, Dimensions and Current Prices •        Currently available from: Crossbow Technologies,  Dust, Inc., Ember and Millennial Net.  •        Coming soon: Motorola, Intel and Philips.  •        Current Size: Crossbow’s motes are currently  the size of a bottle-top. According to the CEO of Crossbow, Mike Horton, the  size is expected to shrink to the size of an aspirin tablet – even a grain of  rice – over the next few years. •        Current Prices: Crossbow Motes (the entire  smart dust sensor - processor, radio, battery, and sensor) range from $40 to  $150 depending on quantity ordered. Crossbow expects prices to fall below $10  in near future. Current  Industry Applications for ‘Smart Dust’‘Smart Dust’ has so far been sprinkled on:  •        Oil tankers: The 885-foot oil tanker, ‘Loch Rannoch’, operated by  BP in the North Atlantic, has been outfitted with 160 wireless sensor motes that measure  vibrations in the ship’s engine to predict equipment failures. The company is  also considering using smart dust networks in over 40 other projects in the  next three years.  •        Wildlife Habitats: At Great Duck Island off the  coast of Maine (USA) a network of 150 wireless sensor motes have been  monitoring the micro-climates in and around nesting burrows used by seabirds.  The aim is to develop a habitat monitoring kit that allows researchers to  monitor sensitive wildlife and habitats in non-intrusive and non-disruptive  ways. •        Bridges: In San Francisco (USA) a network of  sensor motes has been installed to measure the vibration and structural  stresses on the Golden Gate Bridge as a form of proactive maintenance. •        Redwood trees: In Sonoma County, California (USA), researchers  have strapped 120 motes to redwood trees in order to wirelessly and remotely  monitor the micro-climate around the trees from Berkeley, over 70  km away. •        Supermarkets: Honeywell is testing the use of  motes to monitor grocery stores in Minnesota (USA) •        Ports: The US Department of Homeland Security  plans to test the use of motes in Florida ports  and in shipping containers. |