May 13, 2024

IntelinAir announces limited-time offer for Climate FieldView users in Illinois, Indiana

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — IntelinAir Inc., offering automated crop intelligence, announced a new program, offering Climate FieldView users in Illinois and Indiana discounted access to IntelinAir AgMRI.

Users who subscribe by March 1 will receive a discount on high-resolution aerial imagery data, actionable crop intelligence insights and alerts from AgMRI, seamlessly integrated into their FieldView account.

“We see tremendous synergies between the two products since we already work with many farmers who use Climate FieldView,” said Al Eisaian, co-founder and CEO of IntelinAir. “We look forward to augmenting AgMRI with FieldView for proactive visibility and crop intelligence, enabling more farmers to leverage real-time analytics for improved data-driven decisions.”

IntelinAir AgMRI technology uses airplanes, AI, Machine Learning and Computer Vision to capture and analyze high-resolution images over farming fields, delivering uninterrupted views of every acre from early season planting through harvest.

Expediting in-season decision making, AgMRI automatically delivers Smart Alerts for specific problems including weather, equipment, emergence issues, weed outbreaks, insect and disease pressure, nutrient deficiencies and more.

Farmers can then choose to use FieldView to visualize the data on one platform, view crop intelligence across their farm and generate prescriptions for replant or herbicide, leveraging AgMRI insight for efficient application, field and operation-level decisions. Farmers must authorize any data integration or sharing that takes place between AgMRI, FieldView, or third-party systems.

“FieldView is focused on helping farmers and their agronomic partners evaluate performance, optimize inputs and mitigate risk,” said Brent Craig, U.S. commercial director of The Climate Corporation. “By leveraging AgMRI insights in FieldView, our customers can gain heightened visibility into in-season crop performance to improve yield and capture learnings for this year and following seasons.”