TE
TechEcho
Home24h TopNewestBestAskShowJobs
GitHubTwitter
Home

TechEcho

A tech news platform built with Next.js, providing global tech news and discussions.

GitHubTwitter

Home

HomeNewestBestAskShowJobs

Resources

HackerNews APIOriginal HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 TechEcho. All rights reserved.

How can we disrupt the agricultural industry with tech?

12 pointsby hoonbaeover 13 years ago
Does anybody have any ideas or recommendation on ways tech can improve the agricultural industry (i.e. food production, marketing, distribution, etc)? Are there any startups out there doing something pertaining to agriculture? I feel like there's a lot of potential in tapping into Agriculture 2.0.

8 comments

brudgersover 13 years ago
I have in-laws who work for rural phone co-ops in northern Iowa. Back in the late 1990's they were laying fiber-optic everywhere because of the bandwidth farmers were willing to pay for...particularly the hog farms which were largely automated.<p>And that's nothing compared to the level of genetic technology and associated startups involved with agriculture.<p>I'm sorry but the idea that we are at Agriculture 2.0 only suggests a lack of familiarity with the contemporary agriculture industries and a lack of historical perspective.<p>[<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_revolution" rel="nofollow">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_revolution</a>]
euroclydonover 13 years ago
I think anything that brings value up the market will benefit consumers. Let me quote from Mark Mills of Forbes, where he explains that, although a tiny fraction of a percent of the U.S. population works in agriculture today versus 100 years ago, much of that population is now involved in food preparation.<p><i>Roughly a century ago when America had fewer than 100 million citizens, nearly 12 million worked on farms, a number that then comprised over 40 percent of the entire labor force. Now barely three million people call themselves farmers, accounting for a shade over two percent of today’s workforce. Meanwhile, technology enabled a 600 percent growth in agricultural output.<p>Both in absolute and relative terms technology blew the lid off agricultural productivity, and crushed direct farm employment. But, over that same century, somehow the American economy managed to generate enough wealth to create jobs for more than 100 million more workers.<p>Most of the new employment over the past century came from new services and new products that didn’t exist in 1900 – airlines and computing to name only two examples. It is worth noting that a lot of the new employment actually came from the same industry, food, as farming. It’s just that we count the jobs differently. While barely two percent of the modern American workforce is in farming, over 15 percent work in the food industry.</i><p>What is the next step beyond food service?
dpatruover 13 years ago
A site that connects growers with eaters, especially in dense areas. It's very easy to grow much more than you need in a garden, but it's not so easy to sell the surplusage.<p>I can buy vegetables and fruit at the store but it's not just-picked fresh. Why couldn't I buy right off the plant from a neighbor a few minutes' walk away?
评论 #2965958 未加载
oregonspanishover 13 years ago
--VC-type or incubator funding (there are only a few) for agricultural startups --Social sites promoting education in agriculture--countries like Chile hold agriculture up as a profession on par with medicine and law --Full chain product based startups (see POM Wonderful) that manage genetic improvements through breeding, growing, sales and distribution of a novel food product.
TheRealmccoyover 13 years ago
Reverse the entire "Deal" process. Let the Farmer put the deals on its produce and auction its produce to the best bidder.
JoeBloggsFarmerover 13 years ago
Have a look at this approach for Open Source Hardware for the agricultural sector.<p><a href="http://opensourceecology.org/wiki/Global_Village_Construction_Set" rel="nofollow">http://opensourceecology.org/wiki/Global_Village_Constructio...</a>
ig1over 13 years ago
<a href="http://www.farmeron.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.farmeron.com/</a>
feydrover 13 years ago
in all seriousness, stop subsidizing it and let the market deal with it