The Interest in UAVs for Agriculture Grows
April 10, 2017
Chances are, you already know drones are amazing. After all, this is something DroneLife readers just understand. But […]
Parrot, the French parent company of senseFLY (makers of the eBee Ag UAV), recently released details on its […]
With many expecting FAA to announce preliminary commercial regulations in the next few months, if not sooner (the […]
Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS) and Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) have taken the agriculture industry by storm and will […]
Southern States Cooperative — No. 9 on the CropLife 100 — is hosting an FAA-approved drone demonstration at […]
Editor’s note: The 17th Precision Agriculture Survey was completed with partnerships among the departments of Agricultural Economics and […]
A whole lot has happened since we last explored the world of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs). In January, […]
Now is as good a time as any to explore the basics of what a retail aerial imagery program looks like today.
A UAV outfit has received FAA approval to fly commercial drone missions over farmers’ fields in 2015.
Although many color spray rigs are in the yards of the nation’s top ag retailers, the majority of them still come in only a few shades.
Opponents to UAVs seem to think they could be used to spy on other people. But spying is already taking place, through the Internet.
The Midwest AG Industries Exposition (August 20-21) is the place you need to be to see, study and evaluate how new advances in the equipment, operations, crop protection and fertility sectors can help your business prosper.
Technology and understanding global consumer demand for Iowa farm products brought hundreds of farmers and agribusiness leaders to Ames recently for the annual Iowa Farm Bureau Federation Economic Summit.
Farmers and others interested in how UAVs can be used in agricultural applications were able to learn more about the technology during the recent Precision Aerial Ag Show.
Angel Eyes, a FL-based UAS manufacturer, has filed a brief in amicus, or support, in the now-infamous FAA vs. Raphael Pirker case.
The precision agriculture conference program is packed with hot topics and top speakers and the exhibit hall is chock full of precision ag vendors.
Ever-refining technologies are boosting yields and efficiencies, but not all users are satisfied with — or have even found — their path to profitability in precision.
Younger grower-customers will not only expect new agricultural technologies, they will demand it from their ag retailers.
The only thing occuring more rapidly than the technologies’ evolution is the clamoring to implement UAS into agriculture as soon as possible.