With Oxford Computer Consultants (part of System C) expertise, the University of Oxford have been working towards realising the potential of their research correlating flock movement and chickens’ underlying health conditions such as lameness and infection. OpticFlock is a flock management tool that uses a camera to detect anomalies in the movements of chicken flocks on commercial farms and delivers a ‘verdict’ on their current health and welfare status onto a PC or phone. A farmer can thus be given early warning of potential problems, intervene if necessary and so achieve higher standards of flock health and welfare. OpticFlock now works successfully on farms, is easy to set up and can be accessed remotely whilst still retaining adaptability for future changes in industry demands.
Our wide range of expertise includes the selection of hardware and network configuration, as well as development and support services. The software development has turned OpticFlock into a system that can cope with the power outages, electrical interference, network loss, high temperatures and other hazards of working in a computer-hostile farm environment.
The participation of Oxford Computer Consultants (System C) in the development of OpticFlock has also enabled the University of Oxford to leverage funding from two research councils in the UK (BBSRC and EPSRC) and from an international SMART Broiler project jointly sponsored by the Foundation for Food and Agricultural Research (FFAR) and McDonalds.
OpticFlock is now being trialled with Tyson Foods, the largest chicken producer in the US, with Master Good in Hungary and with the Cobb Breeding Company in the UK.
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