Cowlar, a 'Fitbit for cows', just got into Y Combinator

The wearable helps increase dairy output by approximately 15 percent, claims Umer, CEO, Cowlar

Osman Husain | Tech in Asia 

Cowlar, a 'Fitbit for cows', just got into Y Combinator

Cowlar, which started up in but is now headquartered in California, builds a tracking wearable that monitors the body temperature and behaviour of That allows farmers to detect when the is in heat and the best time for

It becomes the second startup from the country to be accepted into Y – after artisanal shoes startup Markhor did it in 2015.

Adnan, CEO of Cowlar, claims the wearable helps increase dairy output by approximately 15 percent.

“We’re a hybrid of dairy science and machine learning inside a plastic box,” he remarks.

Cowlar’s wearable tackles a very real problem. Emerging countries like India, Pakistan, Mexico, and Vietnam have millions of – India is home to the largest livestock population in the world – but average milk yields are around a quarter of those in the US and Netherlands.

A large part of the reason is inferior farming practices, poor nutrition, and abysmal veterinary standards.

“The biggest thing we’re trying to capture is when a cow is in heat. If farmers miss the heat cycle then the next cycle comes after 21 days. If you miss that, you’re missing out on 21 days of milk production,” told Tech in Asia in April.

Stepping out of the comfort zone

The idea for the gizmo came during Umer’s previous entrepreneurial foray – design company E4 Technologies – which developed products for wireless crop monitoring, energy optimization, and motion tracking for sports.

LeEco admits to job cuts but denies closing down India biz
“The response ever since we entered Y has been phenomenal and beyond our wildest expectations,” says “It wasn’t easy to give up a substantial amount of money but we’re trying to fundamentally change the dairy industry.”

Umer’s gizmo costs US$69 and has a battery life of one year.

This is an excerpt from Tech in Asia. You can read the full article here

Cowlar, a 'Fitbit for cows', just got into Y Combinator

The wearable helps increase dairy output by approximately 15 percent, claims Umer, CEO, Cowlar

The wearable helps increase dairy output by approximately 15 percent, claims Umer, CEO, Cowlar
Cowlar, which started up in but is now headquartered in California, builds a tracking wearable that monitors the body temperature and behaviour of That allows farmers to detect when the is in heat and the best time for

It becomes the second startup from the country to be accepted into Y – after artisanal shoes startup Markhor did it in 2015.

Adnan, CEO of Cowlar, claims the wearable helps increase dairy output by approximately 15 percent.

“We’re a hybrid of dairy science and machine learning inside a plastic box,” he remarks.

Cowlar’s wearable tackles a very real problem. Emerging countries like India, Pakistan, Mexico, and Vietnam have millions of – India is home to the largest livestock population in the world – but average milk yields are around a quarter of those in the US and Netherlands.

A large part of the reason is inferior farming practices, poor nutrition, and abysmal veterinary standards.

“The biggest thing we’re trying to capture is when a cow is in heat. If farmers miss the heat cycle then the next cycle comes after 21 days. If you miss that, you’re missing out on 21 days of milk production,” told Tech in Asia in April.

Stepping out of the comfort zone

The idea for the gizmo came during Umer’s previous entrepreneurial foray – design company E4 Technologies – which developed products for wireless crop monitoring, energy optimization, and motion tracking for sports.

LeEco admits to job cuts but denies closing down India biz
“The response ever since we entered Y has been phenomenal and beyond our wildest expectations,” says “It wasn’t easy to give up a substantial amount of money but we’re trying to fundamentally change the dairy industry.”

Umer’s gizmo costs US$69 and has a battery life of one year.

This is an excerpt from Tech in Asia. You can read the full article here
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