A Repairable, No-Tech Tractor
5/30/202639 min
Ursa Ag is an Alberta, Canada-based company that is selling a repairable, no tech tractor. It’s not often we have companies on this podcast, but listeners of the show will know we have been covering the right to repair movement for years. One of the things I’ve written about most is the frustration that farmers feel with agriculture giant John Deere, which has made their tractors very difficult to repair by loading it up with tech, lobbying against right to repair legislation, and making parts and diagnostic tools and repair guides hard to access. When we write about right to repair, people often say - why don’t people just vote with their dollars and buy something else? Well, all the major tractor companies have more or less done the same thing Deere has done - add software locks, sensors, and digital rights management to their tractors. There wasn’t any other alternative. Doug Wilson of Ursa Ag has built an alternative. Ursa Ag is selling a repairable dumb tractor specifically to provide an alternative in the market. We spoke with Doug about how one creates a tractor company, how it all works, and what the response has been. 00:00 Doug Wilson Introduction 00:02:05 Why IRSA Ag Exists 00:04:24 Modern Tractors & Repair Locks 00:07:40 Demand for Older Tractors 00:08:46 The $800K Tractor Story 00:09:37 Building a Repairable Tractor 00:12:56 Precision Ag vs Simplicity 00:20:45 Starting a Tractor Company 00:22:52 AI & Everyday Farm Work 00:27:21 Viral Response & Demand 00:28:52 Expansion Plans 00:31:56 Why Farmers Want Simpler Machines 00:34:11 Farm Consolidation 00:35:48 Tech Overload Beyond Farming 00:36:57 What’s Next YouTube Version: https://youtu.be/wYM4Ho-Ma9w Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Clips
Transcript preview
First 90 secondsDoug Wilson· Guest0:00
Complexity got packaged as improvement. It was a constant push to make things more complex, and I just never bought into complexity being the equivalent of improvement. Is there actually an appreciable improvement for the user, or is it just complexity for the sake of complexity?
Jason Kebler· Host0:19
[upbeat music] Hello, and welcome to the 404 Media podcast, where we bring you untold stories from hidden worlds both online and IRL. 404 Media is a journalist-owned company and needs your support. To subscribe, go to 404media.co. Subscribers get unlimited access to our articles, early access to interview episodes like this one, and bonus segments on our weekly podcast. I'm this week's host, Jason Kebler, and I'm talking to Doug Wilson of Ursa Ag, an Alberta, Canada-based company that is selling a repairable no-tech tractor. It's not often that we have companies on this podcast, but listeners of the show will know I've been covering the right to repair movement for years. One of the things I've written most about is the frustration that farmers feel with agriculture giant John Deere, which has made their tractors really difficult to repair by loading it up with tech, lobbying against right to repair legislation, and making parts and diagnostic tools and repair guides hard to access. When I write about right to repair, people often say, "Why don't farmers just vote with their dollars and buy something else?" Well, all the major tractor companies have more or less done the same thing that Deere