If you want to be a successful farmer today, electronics are pretty much needed. GPS saves us thousands of dollars a year, while also allowing us to be more efficient.Fact,...Electronics are not needed to pass emission laws, or control sub systems. Electronics are end game money makers for the mfg, an are huge cash cows when you totally control the software,.... no matter the type of equipment it's on. 100% control, Cradle to grave is the end game.
Most of this is bullshit. JD makes you sign no contract, and seed companies have all kinds of seeds you can plant, outside of field corn you can even replant seed you produce yourself (well at least with the crops I have knowledge of). We run the newest equipment John Deere has to offer and we do a lot of the maintenance on the machines ourselves, and even quite a bit of the repairs, we dont even use Deere oil or filters for the most part anymore.The end game is that a few global mega corporations control all food production.
From the seeds you are "allowed" to plant, after begging to buy them from your corporate overlords, to the farm vehicles you are "allowed" to run if and when your corporate overlords get around to letting you pay them.
Those stupid contracts JD now tries to get farmers forced to sign where if their tractor won't work because the software won't let it start until they pay a "dealer" to come out and change the oil... but the dealer can't get around to it in time and they loose the crop.... tough luck???
It's actually one of the things I find I often get the "Earth warrior" types onboard about needing good guns... Who needs an AR? Farmers to fight against corporations!
As a mechanic I think it is bullshit that the dealers are allowed a monopoly on the diagnostic software.
I worked at a dealership (vehicle not farm equipment)for 25 years and when the government said "you must share with everyone" there was a huge panic we would be without work. That never happened.
I am not one for government intervention but this is probably a case where they should. The issue is the manufacturers REFUSE to sell the software to anyone outside the dealership network.
It isn't the fact that computers are involved, it is that the owner can't communicate with it.
When a $200 sensor can shut down a $150,000 machine and the dealer doesn't give a fuck crops are going bad that is a problem.
Farming is a fickle thing, crops are only worth harvesting for a short time. It isn't like a contractor who can take a rain day and just resume the job with no I'll effects the next day.
The dealers are screwing themselves over in the long run.
When you own something you should be able to do with it as you wish.
It doesn't make sense for dealers to screw over their customers, how would Deere or the dealers profit if they did? Though I do agree with most of your sentiments. But depending on the crop they can sit in the field for a long time.
Don't get me wrong, I'm no fan of Momma Deere, but there is a crap ton of false information in here, people read one article (which didn't even get the story straight) and they think they know.