Climate Expands Features on FieldView Desktop

Climate Corporation updated its FieldView desktop functionality to include popular features from its mobile platform, writes David Frabotta at PrecisionAg. The new desktop features include field region reports, enhanced scouting features, and enhanced usability tools that give users access to improved analysis tools to help farmers make agronomic and business decisions.

Kyle King

Kyle King, FieldView Commercial Product Director

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“We had a lot of great feedback from customers using our tools on the app, and what we found over time is that a lot of planning and decisions still get made at their desk, whether that’s the farmer or in partnership with their business partners,” says Kyle King, FieldView Commercial Product Director. “During the pandemic and less travel, fewer people are face to face, which is one of the reasons we brought these features to the desktop. And when we look at customers, and on my family farm, when decisions are being made, if users get into detail on agronomic results on the farm, they probably aren’t doing it on their phone. Some are using their iPad, but there are a lot of folks who like diving into the data on their desktop, and they’re already using a lot of applications on their desktop to evaluate performance on the farm agronomically and financially. Bringing this data to the web streamlines and brings more information to life for them, and it helps them navigate across all their data sets easier.”

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The new desktop features are:

Field Region Reports: Users can “circle” areas of interest on your FieldView maps more precisely on their desktop; Save these areas as regions with notes or photos from in-field visits. This saves time, improves accuracy and easily collaborates across all devices for deeper analysis of hybrid/variety selection, seed population, soil type, elevation, and more.

“Being able to drill down into subfields to understand agronomic results, whether it’s hybrid varieties and the results in those microenvironments, to seeding rate results across those hybrids and varieties, to planting dates, elevation, and soil type results bring those key agronomics to the desktop where more users can use them in the fashion in which they are used to analyzing their data,” King says.

Continue reading at PrecisionAg.

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