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Tapping the Computing Cloud for Smarter Water05-18-10 | News

Tapping the Computing Cloud for Smarter Water




The screen to operate the SmartBox irrigation controller. Landscape managers replace irrigation controllers with the SmartBox (the company also developed a retrofit option) and then configure the system with a Web-based application. - Photo Courtesy of ET Water Systems
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If irrigation systems were half as smart as scientific calculators, they could cut water usage by 20 percent to 50 percent, according to ET Water Systems.

The company earlier this year introduced its SmartBox, a replacement for commercial-scale irrigation controllers that determines the watering needs for landscaping based on a mash-up of site-specific data and local weather. A new version of the device, set for release this summer, will be able to get firmware upgrades over the cell network it uses.

Water conservation is an area that's often considered overlooked by investors and technology entrepreneurs. That's largely because there isn't a large economic incentive to conserve, according to ET Water CEO Pat McIntyre. Still, the Novato, Calif.-based company plans in the fourth-quarter to seek $5 million of venture capital to expand its distribution.

Business at the eight-year-old company has suffered from the economic downturn over the past two years. But McIntyre said he expects that rising costs for water and state mandates around conservation will drive demand for technology upgrades.

''It's the high-tech companies which are the first to adopt this,'' McIntyre said, adding that Adobe Systems, Facebook, Apple, and Google are all customers. The payback for these irrigation systems, which cost about $2,000 installed, is around two years. They are designed for college campuses or office building parks.

People can input variables, such as soil type, slope, shading, and plant type (mature trees versus turf, for example). That watering schedule is adjusted automatically by ET Water computers by incorporating weather information from WeatherBug.com.

- Courtesy of CNET News

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