Skip to Main Content

Sensors: The Possibilities are Endless

Do you know the how you could use sensors on your farm or in your business?

In this Digging into the Data Pipeline presentation, Gaganpreet Singh Hundal, a PhD candidate in computer and information technology and graduate research assistant in digital agriculture at Purdue University, gives an overview of the different types of sensors available and how they can best be used on your farm or in our agribusiness.

View the Sensors: The Possibilities are Endless video here.

This video presentation is part of the Digging into the Data Pipeline webinar series hosted by the College of Agriculture at Purdue University.

View the Digging into the Data Pipeline playlist on Youtube.

This series was supported in part by the Wabash Heartland Innovation Network (WHIN).

Digital Agriculture Posts

Cattle - Purdue Farm
Digital Beef Herd Records

Herd records (breeding, pregnancy checks, births, weaning, treatments, etc.) have value from...

Read More
Upinder Kaur, assistant professor of agricultural and biological engineering, works on a robot dog that finds ticks and identifies tick activity.
Using artificial intelligence to understand the natural world

Purdue Agriculture researchers are harnessing the power of artificial intelligence (AI) and...

Read More
Field of corn with sun shining in background
Ignacio Ciampitti returns to Purdue as co-director of IDAAS and professor of agronomy

Purdue University’s College of Agriculture recently welcomed Ignacio Ciampitti, an...

Read More
Close-up of Hunsoo Song in front of the pink blossoms of a crabapple tree
Hunsoo Song, the civil engineer who speaks (in algorithms) for the trees

Fire, metal, water, earth and wood. In South Korean tradition, these five elements explain...

Read More
Tomi Lori Ankita looking at tomato
Purdue-led TOMI project receives $3.5M grant to turn a decade of data into new tools and strategies for tomato farmers

Indiana ranks third in the nation for tomato production. Lori Hoagland, a professor in Purdue...

Read More
Purdue research team uses a computer on top of a drone to gather data
Purdue researchers acquire and analyze data through AI network that predicts maize yield

Artificial intelligence (AI) is the buzz phrase of 2024. Though far from that cultural spotlight,...

Read More
To Top