Dairyfarm -v1.0- By Tokyo Dairy ((new)) Jun 2026

Tokyo's dairy industry is surprisingly robust, often localized in the and cities like Hachioji. Sustainability in Action – A Dairy Farm in Tokyo

Free onboarding and data migration support for the first 100 farms.

Before v1.0, Tokyo Dairy’s network of partner farms relied on disparate systems—paper logs, Excel spreadsheets, and legacy software from the early 2000s. This led to inefficiencies in milk collection, delays in detecting bovine diseases, and a lack of real-time visibility into production forecasts. In response, Tokyo Dairy’s internal R&D division, in collaboration with IoT engineers from Yokohama, spent 18 months developing a proprietary solution. The result is . DairyFarm -v1.0- By Tokyo Dairy

“Unit 04 is showing a two percent dip in calcium synthesis,” a soft, synthesized voice murmured in Kaito’s ear.

He tapped a virtual icon, sending a specialized nutrient drone humming toward the specific stall. “Adjust the nutrient mix for the morning feed,” Kaito commanded. “And increase the ultraviolet simulation in Sector B. They” This led to inefficiencies in milk collection, delays

Navigation is accomplished via swipe gestures, and the font size is adjustable for aging eyes. Tokyo Dairy even included a "night mode" with red filters so farmers can check data during midnight rounds without disturbing the animals’ circadian rhythms.

How does stack up against established players like DairyMaster (Netherlands) or Afimilk (Israel)? “Unit 04 is showing a two percent dip

provides a methodological framework for value-added ratios in Japanese milk processing. Journal of Dairy Science Summary of the Japanese Dairy Sector

Track health metrics, feeding schedules, and milk production per animal using IoT-ready sensors and manual entry tools. Receive alerts for anomalies like reduced feed intake or fever symptoms.

launches on May 15, 2026 under three tiers: