Former All Black backs down-to-earth rural internet provider
With the COVID-19 lockdown placing even greater emphasis on the need for reliable internet networks, a former All Black is working to keep New Zealand’s rural folk connected.
TELECOMMS COMPANY Spark says the rollout of its 4G services in Waikato will help dairy farmers.
Spark spokesman David Walker says fast mobile broadband allows tapping into the latest technologies anywhere, to get on with their work faster. The 4G services, at 700MHz, put mobile apps on city speeds, a huge time-saver that raises efficiencies onfarm, Walker told Dairy News.
“Earlier this year one of our customers, Craig Waterhouse, a Morrinsville dairy farmer, used his mobile device (the HTC One M8) to access 4G on the 700MHz spectrum as part of a trial we ran in Waikato.”
During the trial he used LIC’s pasture app Minda Pasture to record pasture covers during a farm walk. The data he was collecting could then be uploaded automatically in the paddock to Minda Land & Feed.
Walker says this shows how faster mobile speeds are saving Waterhouse time.
“We’re also seeing access to fast mobile speeds influence the companies creating these new technologies, such as mobile apps, and the way they’re being presented to customers.
“Apps such as LIC’s Minda Pasture, DairyNZ’s FDE calculator or Fonterra’s Fencepost app make everyday tasks simpler and faster. And the design of these apps paired with 4G encourages and allows dairy farmers to analyse and manipulate the data they collect, for more informed decisions.”
Spark Networks chief operating officer David Havercroft says the 4G rollout in Waikato marks a start. “Over the next few months we’ll widen our 4G footprint in Waikato, including the Coromandel, and will bring this technology to existing sites by February 2015.
“Before Christmas this year we’ll also extend our coverage to Rotorua, enabling 4G over 700MHz in the northern part of the region, building on our existing 4G coverage in central Rotorua on the 1800MHz spectrum. This is part of our broader plan to extend 4G on the Spark network to other locations across the country.”
Faster speeds result from Spark having bought more “spectrum blocks” in the 700 MHz range, Havercroft says. “The more spectrum a mobile operator has the faster the speeds it can offer to its customers and the more data it can carry. So, for our customers this will mean much faster access to online content on their mobile devices, wherever they’re located in 4G coverage areas.”
Spark expects 10 devices will work on the 700 MHz spectrum by the end of this year.
Analysis by Dunedin-based Techion New Zealand shows the cost of undetected drench resistance in sheep has exploded to an estimated $98 million a year.
Shipping disruption caused by Houthi rebels in the Red Sea has so far not impacted fertiliser prices or supply on farm.
The opportunity to spend more time on farm while providing a dedicated service for shareholders attracted new environmental manager Ben Howden to work for Waimakariri Irrigation Limited (WIL).
Federated Farmers claims that the Otago Regional Council is charging ahead unnecessarily with piling more regulation on rural communities.
Dairy sheep and goat farmers are being told to reduce milk supply as processors face a slump in global demand for their products.
OPINION: We have good friends from way back who had lived in one of our major cities for many years.