I think you're right about an epiphany [member=16228]pgkevet[/member]. But I could have such an epiphany, for example that what I really needed was, say, an interactive pop-hole on my hen house which would let in my hens but not rats or foxes, but I wouldn't know how to go about inventing it. Of course something similar has already been invented for letting cats in through their own cat flaps and keeping other cats out, but that's the story of my invention life

. I don't think anyone has developed such a thing though for hens.......
But say it was something new, then I would have had the idea and identified the need, but it would take someone who understood the mechanics or knew how to develop a computer programme that would need to be set up. It's a bit like the engineer who invented an indwelling drain for babies and people with hydrocephalus. The doctor explained to him what the problem was with his new son, he thought about it and went home, applied his engineering knowledge, and came up with the gadget which now gives normal or near normal lives to so many people born hydrocephalic.
[member=23925]chrismahon[/member], you can have my henhouse pophole idea to play with
[member=3211]Anke[/member] I see the problem with semen sexing and its adaptation to goats and smallholding, and that is of course the major hindrance to R&D of any idea for smallscale farming. What you say is something I didn't know though. It wouldn't be very useful in sheep either, would it, except dairy sheep but they are few and far between.
I think what I am driving at is that BigAgri isn't going to bother inventing stuff for small farmers, or adapting big ideas either, but then there's nothing in it for inventors to get going with small farming ideas either. I thought there could be a place for someone with past knowledge and expertise to come up with new inventions.
The course is about feeding the world both now and in the future.
Allegedly, there is enough food produced worldwide today to feed all 7.5 billion of us. It doesn't happen though because of 'food loss' (at production level), food wastage (at retail and consumer level), politics, war, supply chains - oh we have lots of excuses for the millions and millions of people dying of starvation in the world today. Unless a huge decision is taken to restrict population growth both of births, and perhaps bumping off grannies like me at 60 (

I
think that's a joke

but maybe not) then there will be 9 billion of us soon. So 'future proofing' food supplies by whatever methods we can come up with is what we are aiming for and current suggestions on the course are high tech. So my idea is to increase the efficiency of small scale food production as well as large scale, as it seems that only large scale is considered worthy of investment for the future security of food production.