Latest Post

2017 2018 4G add-ons Aiarty Image Enhancer Android apbn App Apple Application arabic Archaeology Argentina Arrest warrant Arrow keys Artificial Intelligence Artikel Arus Kas aset kripto Asia Assange Associated Press Aston Martin Aston Martin One-77 Astronomical unit Asyar Atlantis Audi Audi A5 Audi Q7 Australia Austria auto like Automobile Autos Avaya Device Manager Azwar Abubakar B. J. Habibie bacaan tahlil Bachelor's degree Backup badan pengawasan obat bius Badan Pusat Statistik Badanan Bagi Bali Ballmer Bandung Bandwidth Tests Bangkalan Bank Indonesia Banner Baptists Barack Obama Barbie Baru BASIC bbc Beauty pageant Bedework Bedework beginner Belum Beri Berpura BI Biar Biasanya Bilbo Baggins bima sakti Binance Bisnis Bitcoin Biz Stone BJ Habibie BKN BKPM BlackBerry BlackBerry PlayBook Blackpool Blog Blogger Blogger help Blur (band) BNI BNN Bob Hasan Boeing Bogor Bom BonJovi Bonus 1GB Bonus Data Bonus Smartfren Borobudur BPK Brain Bridget Firtle Britney Spears Broadband Broadband Internet access Browser Brunei Bruno Mars Brussels BSE Buah Ape Bubarkan PKS Buddhism Budidaya Buenos Aires Bugatti Veyron BugattiVeyron Bugzilla Bukittinggi bumi Bureau of Labor Statistics Burma Busdiness Business Business and Economy Business school BY COUNTRY Cable television Calendar California capres 2014 Car Cara Cara Mencari Kerja Cara Menjual Diri Cara Menulis Cara Menulis Resume cars Cascading Style Sheets Cash conversion cycle CBS News CCC CD ripper CDDB Central Authentication Service Central Java Chairul Saleh Chania Chat room Chester Chief Digital Offers Chief marketing officer Chile China Cho Kyuhyun Chris Johns Christine Quinn Chuck Hagel Cisco PIX City Classified information Clients Climate change Clothing CMO CMOs cms CNET.com CNN Coba CoffeeScript Cognition Collecting Colleges and Universities Colotomy Combinatorics Community Compact Disc Companies Company Comparison of antivirus software Computer crime Computer file Computers and Internet Connect Content management system Contoh Proposal Control key Corruption Eradication Commission Counties CPN CPNS CPNS 2013 Crack epidemic (United States) Create Crime Cryptocurrency CSS Current account Customer Customer service CV DA2 Daerah Dalam Dalat Dalcroze Eurhythmics Dallas Dan Dan (rank) Dangdut Academy2 Dangdut Akademi2 Daniel Tal Daniele De Rossi Danny Quirk Dari Data center Data Communications Database administrator Dating Daun kelor Dead Space 2 Death Debu Decision making Default (finance) Definisi Deforestation in Indonesia Dell Dell inspiron N4010 Drivers For Windows 7 (32bit) Democracy Democratic Design & Printing Dessau Device driver Device Drivers devisit Dick Costolo Digital Clock Digital distribution Digital marketing Digital photography Digital Subscriber Line Digital System Dire Straits Disk Management Distilleries DNS DNS hosting service DNS Server Dolls Domain name Domain Name System Dompet Donald Benek DoubleClick DoubleClick Insights Dow Jones Industrial Average download Download Driver LapTop Download manager DownThemAll DPR driver canon Drivers Drupal Drupal Planet Dubai Duduk Duhur Dunayevskaya Raya DVD Dynamic Views E-book East Java East Nusa Tenggara Economy ecstasy Education Edward Snowden Efficient Cars Eid al-Adha Eid al-Fitr Eid ul-Fitr Ekonomi Embassies and Consulates Embraer Regional Jet Émile Jaques-Dalcroze Employee Empowerment Employment Enable Flas Player Energy Alternatif Energy minister Entertainment EPUB Eropa Erwin Arnada European Central Bank European Commission European Parliament European Union Evan Williams Evi Juara DA2 Evi Masamba Evil Bong EXO exo planet expensive expensive cars expensive cars 2013 expensive cars speed Experience point F. W. de Klerk Facebook Facebook Graph Search Fashion Federal Reserve System Ferrari Ferrari 458 Italia Ferrari Enzo FIA Fianna Fáil File Management File Transfer Protocol Filipina Financial Aid Firefox Firefox 3.5 Firefox 3.6 FLAC Flas Player Flax Flipcard Floor trader FM Transmitter font Food and Drink Foods Ford Fusion Forest FPI Fred Phelps Free Free content free hosting Free Proxy Free Proxy Lists FreeDB FreeSat TV Freeware Frekuensi friend FriendFeed Fujian Gallery Game design Games Ganjar Garuda Garuda Indonesia Gaussian blur Gautama Buddha Gaya Hidup Gaza Gerindra Germany Daun Ghalib Github Global navigation satellite system Global Newsbeat Global Redirect Glossarium Glutinous rice Gmail GNU General Public License Golden Globe Award Goldman Sachs Golkar Google Google Analytics Google Docs Google Friend Connect Google Search Google Translate Google+ Government Government Issues Grafena Graffiti Grand Final DA2 Grandma Grandparent Graph Search Graphic Design Graphics Graphics processing unit Gratis Greasemonkey Greenhouse gas GROW Guy Rosen GYM Habibie Hacker Hagel Hagen Haiti Hal Halley Halley's Comet Hallo Halloween Hambalang Hamster Handhelds Hank Johnson Hard disk drive Hardware Hari Hars Haryono Suyono HCL Technologies Helmi Johannes Hendarman Supandji Hennessey Venom GT heroin Hewlett-Packard Hibrid High-definition television Hindia Belanda History History of Java Hitung Mundur Pilkada Hobbit Holly Qur'an Hollywood Home Honda Honda Accord Hongkong Hosted Proxy Services Hosting hosting gratis Hosts HOTBISNIS HotBot HOTINFO Hotmail How Search Works How To HTML HTML element HTTP cookie HTTP Secure HTTrack Huffington Post Hulu Human resources Humboldt huruf Hypertext Transfer Protocol Hyundai Sonata Ian Richardson Ibukota Baru ICQ Idaho Falls Idul Adha Idul Fitri Idul Fitri 1435H Ijin Iklan iMacros Image Imsak Income India Indonesia Indonesian Aerospace Indonesian Democratic Party – Struggle Indonesian National Armed Forces Indonesian rupiah Indonesian Ulema Council Indosiar Indro Infiniti Information retrieval Information Technology inggris INI file Ink cartridge Inkatha Freedom Party inovator Insomnia Inspiron Instant messaging Insulators Intel Core Intel Core i7 Intel Corporation intermediate Internal internasional International Monetary Fund International Whaling Commission InternationalSpaceStation Internet Internet access Internet Connect Internet Download Manager Internet Explorer Internet Gratis Internet Phone Internet Protocol Internet safety Internet service provider Internet television Investigasi Investing Investor Investor Awal IOS IP address ip2700 IPad IPhone iPhone terbaik IPsec Iptek Iran Iron Man 3 Islam Islamic Defender Front Islamic Defenders Front Israel Isya Jack Dorsey Jacques-Dalcroze JADWAL IMSAK 2016 JADWAL SELEKSI CPNS Jakarta Jakarta Globe James Brooke Jamur Tiram Japan Jateng Java Java Development Kit Java version history Java virtual machine JavaScript Jawa Timur Jendela jenis proxy Jika Jika Anda jobs Joe Biden Johannesburg Join the Conversation Joko Widodo Jokowi Joseph McBrennan JPEG JRE Juara DA2 Juara Dangdut Akademi 2 Juga Juli Julian Assange Juru Justin Timberlake Jusuf Kalla Kalau Kali Kam Kami Kapal Selam Karena Kata Keamanan Kedua kehidupan Kekuatan sinyal Kelas 3 Kemanusiaan Yang Adil dan Beradab Kenapa Kepemimpinan Kesehatan Kesra Ketiga Ketika Ketuhanan Yang Maha Esa Ketupat Kíla Kilas VOA Kinetic Energy Recovery System Kini Kita Knowledge Graph Koenigsegg Koenigsegg Agera Koenigsegg CCX Koenigsegg CCXR Koenigsegg Trevita kokain Komet Koneksi nirkabel Konflik Konser Kemenangan DA2 Konsultasi Korea koruptor Kota Rajasthan KPU kriminal Kripto Krishna Kristiani Herawati Krystal Jung KSPI Kung Fu Kupang l Sony Lagu Evi Masamba Lamborghini Lamborghini Aventador Lamborghini Reventón land grabs Languages Laporan Arus Kas Laporan Keuangan Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol LCGC LEBARAN Lemsaneg Leopard Let Me Try Libre knowledge like Likuiditas link Link Building link friend linkedin Linux List of Buddhist temples List of countries by oil production List of Empire ships (Sa–Sh) List of PDF software List of petroleum companies LittleBigPlanet LittleBigPlanet 2 Lodging Login Lokal Lord of the Rings Los Angeles Lost Civilizations Mac OS X Mac OS X Leopard Macintosh Macklemore MacOS Magelang Maghrib Maharaja Mailing list Majapahit makanan Makes and Models Malang Malaysia Malicious Software Maná Management Manajemen Manajemen Perubahan Mandela Marc Brackett Marine biology Marine Ecology Progress Series Mario Mark Zuckerberg Market News Market sentiment Marketing Marketing and Advertising Marketing Team Martial Arts Masehi Massachusetts Mata Uang Kripto mata-mata matahari Matematika Math Mbah Google McLaren McLaren F1 McLaren P1 media query MediaTek Megabyte Megawati Megawati Sukarnoputri Membaca Neraca Memory Fox Menjebol Neraca Menulis CV Merdeka Meta Meta element Meta Tags Meteor shower Meteoroid Michael Bloomberg Microsoft Microsoft Internet Explorer Microsoft PowerPoint Microsoft Windows Middle East Mikheil Saakashvili MikroTik Miley Cyrus Military Militer Minta Maaf mirror web Miss World Miss World 2013 Missions mlm Mobil Murah Mobile application development Mobile Computing Mobile device Mobipocket Mobutu Sese Seko Modal Kerja Model Paradigma Budaya Mohammad Hatta MOHON MAAF LAHIR DAN BATHIN Monorail Moon Moscow most expensive most expensive cars Motion Design Motivasi Motivation Movies Mozilla Mozilla Firefox Mozilla Project MP3 Mpu Prapanca MS-CHAP MSN MSN Messenger MTV Video Music Award Muara Hati Multifunction printer Multimedia Murah Mural Music Music and Audio Music roll Muslim my blog My Telkomsel Myanmar N4010 Nagarakretagama Nagasaki Name server Namun NASA Nasional National Football League National Geographic National Monument National Security Agency Nature Negara Nelson Mandela Neraca Netscape Network Network Connection New South Wales New York New York City New York City Police Department New York Stock Exchange New York Times News Nigel Dessau Niger Nigeria Nissan Altima Nobel Peace Prize Norwegian Media Authority Notepad Notepad++ November NSA NTLM NU Nudi Nürburgring Nusa Dua Nusantara NYSE NYSE Euronext NYX obat bius sintetik offline browser Ogg Onavo Online online business Online Communities Online dating service Online Education Online shopping Ookla OPEC Open Europe Open source Opera Mobile Operating system Operating Systems opium Oppa Optical fiber Organization Orion Orionid Orton Orton Effect OS X OS-2 Otomotif Owneys Rum Pada Pada (foot) Pagani Zonda PageRank PageSpeed Pakistan Pala Empire Palestina Palestinian people palm oil Pancasila Panduan Panel Para Partai Demokrat Pathauto Pay per click PayPal pbb PC Plus Peat Pelajaran Bsnis pemasaran Pembinaan Pemenang DA2 Pemilu Pen Qur'an Pendampingan Pendorong Pengetahuan Peningkatan Gambar AI Peningkatan Kualitas Gambar Peninsula Valdes Penipuan Penyakit Berbahaya penyelidikan Penyiaran People People's Justice Party (Malaysia) Perangkat Lunak Pengolah Foto Perilaku Persatuan Indonesia Personal computer Personal Learning Network Personally identifiable information Personals Pertama Pertamina Pertukaran pertukaran kripto Peru Perusahaan Listrik Negara Pesawat Tak Berawak Peter Godwin Peternakan Petroleum Petroleum industry Philippines Phnom Penh Phone Photograph PHP Piano Picasa Picasa Web Albums Picnik PILGUB PILGUB 2018 PILGUB JATENG PILKADA PILKADA SERENTAK 2018 Pilpres Pilpres 2014 PKS Korupsi PKS Sarang Koruptor planet Platforms Playboy Playboy Indonesia PlayStation PlayStation 3 PLN Plone Plug-in (computing) Pluit Point-to-Point Tunneling Protocol Pokki Policy Political Philosophers Political Philosophy Political Science Ponsel ponsel terbaik Porsche 918 Portable Document Format Portlet PostgreSQL Postmedia News Pownce PPTP PQ 12 PQ 15 Prabowo Subianto Prajogo Pangestu Prambanan Pratt Institute Presiden Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono Primera Capital print Print Design printer printer 3d Product placement Profesional Programming Promo Promote Promotion Proposal Usaha Prose Protocols Provinces Proxify Proxy server Proxying and Filtering Przedsiębiorstwo Komunikacji Samochodowej Public DNS Publik Publishing Publishing and Printing Pulang2 Ganteng Pulau Jawa Purnomo Yusgiantoro Python Qualcomm Quantum Leap Qur'an Digital Quran Rabu 18 Desember 2013 Radio Rakernas Ramadan Randall Miller ransomware Rape Rasio Likuiditas Recreation Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation Registry cleaner Regulasi Rekap Pilpres 2014 Relationship Religion and Spirituality Repost Resolusi Gambar Tinggi Resume Resumes and Portfolios Retirement Reuters RF Power Amplifier Rheinmetall Riau Ridwan Robert Kiyosaki Robin Thicke Roboform Roi Tiger Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil RTC RTT News rum Rumah Rusia Sabu Safari Salah Sales Sam Hall Samsung Sandy Bridge Sangat (term) Sani Abacha Sapta Pesona satelit Satu Saving Money SBY Puas Scam Scholarship Scintilla Scripts SCTV (Indonesia) SD Sea Lines of Communication Search Search engine optimization Search Engines Searching Secure Socket Tunneling Protocol Security Sejuk Sekolah Olahraga Nasional SELAMAT HARI RAYA IDUL FITRI 1434H Selamat Idul Fitri Selanjutnya SELEKSI CPNS Semarang seo seo service online Seoul September 2013 Serbia Sergei Krikalev Server Sesungguhnya Shareware Shopping Shopping mall Short Shwedagon Pagoda Siaran Silvio Berlusconi Sime Darby Singapore Single Evi Masamba Single sign-on Site map Site Submission Sitemap skema investasi SlideShare Slideshow SM Entertainment Smartphone Smartphones Smarty Smaug SMV SMV FreeSat TV social bookmark Social media Social Network Social Networking Social Sciences Society Soeharto Soekarno software Software Peningkatan Gambar Solar sail Sosial South Africa Southeast Asia Southern right whale Soviet Union Soweto Space Space Shuttle Discovery Speedtest.net SPN Sports Sports car Sriwijaya Air SSL Stanford University States and Divisions Statistics Indonesia Stephan Winkelmann Stereo FM Transmitter Steve Ballmer Steve McQueen Steven Sinofsky Stock Exchange of Singapore Stock market Streaming media Student Subscriber Identity Module Subuh Suharto Sukanto Tanoto Sukhoi Sumatra Sumatra PDF Super Bowl Superior mesenteric artery Surabaya Surat Susan Boyle Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono Swasta Sweden Switzerland system backup image System Restore T-shirt Tablet Taeyeon tahlil tahlilan Taipan Daily Taiwan Tanah Abang Tapi tata surya Tatto Taylor Swift TeachMeet TechCrunch technology Teknologi Teknologi Kecerdasan Buatan teks tahlil Tel Aviv Telepon Gratis Televisi Television Telkomsel Telstra Template Designer Templates Temporary Internet Files Teori Keuangan Terkenal Ternak Ternak Belut Territorial Disputes Test Testing and Tools Tf–idf Thailand The Noble Experiment Things You Didn't Know About... ThinkPad Thomas Tiffany Tiga Timeline Timor Timor Leste Timur Timur Tengah Tips Tips Kesehatan Title Tommy Suharto Tony Abbott Toolbar Tools Toyota Toyota Camry Toys Toys and Games Traffic collision Translation Transmitter Transport Layer Security Travel Travel and Tourism trik blog Trowulan Tujuan Wisata tutorial tvone Twentieth Century Twitter U.S. Economy Uang Baru Ulang Tahun Ultraviolet Undang Undang Undang Desa Uniform resource locator United Arab Emirates United States United States Secretary of Defense Universities University of Utah unlimited hosting free Unmanned Untuk update Uploading and downloading UPortal Usaha USB Flash Drive Ustad Ustaz utility UU Desa Valuasi Saham Veggies verification Verizon Fios Veto Video Video game Video Games Virginia Virtual private network virus Vista Vitamin VOA VOA News Voice of America VOIP Volkswagen Group Volkswagen Passat Voltage Regulator VPN VPN Connection Waktu Sholat Washington Washington DC WAV Web browser Web cache Web content management system Web Design Web Design and Development Web directory web hosting Web proxy web robot Web search engine Web server Web traffic webmaster tools Website Website Reviews Weekly welcome West Sumatra WETA Digital Whitney Houston Wi-Fi Wibiya Wifi wiki WikiLeak Wikileaks Wikimania Wikimedia Commons Wikimedia Foundation Wilayah Winamp Window 8 Windows Windows 10 Windows 11 Windows 2000 Windows 7 Windows 8 windows 8 backup Windows 8.1 Windows 95 Windows 98 Windows 9x Windows API Windows Media Audio Windows Mobile Windows NT Windows Phone Windows Phone 7 Windows Registry Windows startup process Windows Update Windows Vista Windows XP Wiranto Wireless Data Wisata WordPress World bank Writer Writing x factor Xiaomi Mi5 XML Yahoo Yahoo Messenger Yangon Yogyakarta Yossi Vardi YouTube Yuri Gagarin Zaskia Zemanta ZIP (file format) Zoner Photo Studio ZTE


For the Soup Dragons album, see Hydrophonic.
Enlarge picture
NASA researcher checking hydroponic onions with Bibb lettuce to his left and radishes to the right
Hydroponics (From the Greek words hydro, water and ponos, labor) is a method of growing plants using mineral nutrient solutions, in water, without soil. Terrestrial plants may be grown with their roots in the mineral nutrient solution only or in an inert medium, such as perlite, gravel, mineral wool, or coconut husk.
Researchers discovered in the 19th century that plants absorb essential mineral nutrients as inorganic ions in water. In natural conditions, soil acts as a mineral nutrient reservoir but the soil itself is not essential to plant growth. When the mineral nutrients in the soil dissolve in water, plant roots are able to absorb them. When the required mineral nutrients are introduced into a plant's water supply artificially, soil is no longer required for the plant to thrive. Almost any terrestrial plant will grow with hydroponics. Hydroponics is also a standard technique in biology research and teaching.

History

The earliest published work on growing terrestrial plants without soil was the 1627 book, Sylva Sylvarum by Sir Francis Bacon, printed a year after his death. Water culture became a popular research technique after that. In 1699, John Woodward published his water culture experiments with spearmint. He found that plants in less pure water sources grew better than plants in distilled water. By 1842 a list of nine elements believed to be essential to plant growth had been made out, and the discoveries of the German botanists, Julius von Sachs and Wilhelm Knop, in the years 1859-65, resulted in a development of the technique of soilless cultivation.[1] Growth of terrestrial plants without soil in mineral nutrient solutions was called solution culture. It quickly became a standard research and teaching technique and is still widely used today. Solution culture is now considered a type of hydroponics where there is no inert medium.
In 1929, Professor William Frederick Gericke of the University of California at Berkeley began publicly promoting that solution culture be used for agricultural crop production.[2] He first termed it aquaculture but later found that aquaculture was already applied to culture of aquatic organisms. Gericke created a sensation by growing tomato vines twenty-five feet high in his back yard in mineral nutrient solutions rather than soil.[3] By analogy with the ancient Greek term for agriculture, geoponics, the science of cultivating the earth, Gericke introduced the term hydroponics in 1937 (although he asserts that the term was suggested by Dr. W. A. Setchell, of the University of California) for the culture of plants in water (from the Greek hydros, "water", and ponos, "labor").[1]
Reports of Gericke's work and his claims that hydroponics would revolutionize plant agriculture prompted a huge number of requests for further information. Gericke refused to reveal his secrets claiming he had done the work at home on his own time. This refusal eventually resulted in his leaving the University of California. In 1940, he wrote the book, Complete Guide to Soilless Gardening.
Two other plant nutritionists at the University of California were asked to research Gericke's claims. Dennis R. Hoagland and Daniel I. Arnon wrote a classic 1938 agricultural bulletin, The Water Culture Method for Growing Plants Without Soil,[4] debunking the exaggerated claims made about hydroponics. Hoagland and Arnon found that hydroponic crop yields were no better than crop yields with good quality soils. Crop yields were ultimately limited by factors other than mineral nutrients, especially light. This research, however, overlooked the fact that hydroponics has other advantages including the fact that the roots of the plant have constant access to oxygen and that the plants have access to as much or as little water as they need. This is important as one of the most common errors when growing is over- and under- watering; and hydroponics prevents this from occurring as large amounts of water can be made available to the plant and any water not used, drained away, recirculated, or actively aerated, eliminating anoxic conditions which drown root systems in soil. In soil, a grower needs to be very experienced to know exactly how much water to feed the plant. Too much and the plant will not be able to access oxygen; too little and the plant will lose the ability to transport nutrients, which are typically moved into the roots while in solution.
These two researchers developed several formulas for mineral nutrient solutions, known as Hoagland solution. Modified Hoagland solutions are still used today.
One of the early successes of hydroponics occurred on Wake Island, a rocky atoll in the Pacific Ocean used as a refueling stop for Pan American Airlines. Hydroponics was used there in the 1930s to grow vegetables for the passengers. Hydroponics was a necessity on Wake Island because there was no soil, and it was prohibitively expensive to airlift in fresh vegetables.
In the 1960s, Allen Cooper of England developed the Nutrient film technique. The Land Pavilion at Walt Disney World's EPCOT Center opened in 1982 and prominently features a variety of hydroponic techniques. In recent decades, NASA has done extensive hydroponic research for their Controlled Ecological Life Support System or CELSS. Hydroponics intended to take place on Mars are using LED lighting to grow in different color spectrum with much less heat.
In 1978, hydroponics pioneer Dr. Howard Resh published the first edition of his book "Hydroponics Food Production." This book (now updated) spurred what has become known as the 3-part base nutrients formula that is still a major component of today's hydroponics gardening. Resh later went on to publish other books, and is currently in charge of a highly advanced hydroponics research and production facility in the Caribbean.
In the last few years, the popularity in the hydroponics marketplace has increased rapidly.[5]

Origin

Soilless culture

Gericke originally defined hydroponics as crop growth in mineral nutrient solutions, with no solid medium for the roots. He objected in print to people who applied the term hydroponics to other types of soilless culture such as sand culture and gravel culture. The distinction between hydroponics and soilless culture of plants has often been blurred. Soilless culture is a broader term than hydroponics; it only requires that no soils with clay or silt are used. Note that sand is a type of soil yet sand culture is considered a type of soilless culture. Hydroponics is a subset of soilless culture. Many types of soilless culture do not use the mineral nutrient solutions required for hydroponics.
Billions of container plants are produced annually, including fruit, shade and ornamental trees, shrubs, forest seedlings, vegetable seedlings, bedding plants, herbaceous perennials and vines. Most container plants are produced in soilless media, representing soilless culture. However, most are not hydroponics because the soilless medium often provides some of the mineral nutrients via slow release fertilizers, cation exchange and decomposition of the organic medium itself. Most soilless media for container plants also contain organic materials such as peat or composted bark, which provide some nitrogen to the plant. Greenhouse growth of plants in peat bags is often termed hydroponics, but technically it is not because the medium provides some of the mineral nutrients.
Plants that are not traditionally grown in a climate would be possible to grow using a controlled environment system like hydroponics. During World War II produce was grown with hydroponics on the barren Pacific Islands. According to a 1938 Times magazine article, this was one of the first times that commercial use of hydroponics was used on such a large scale to feed people. This group of islands was used as a refueling stop for Pan-Am Airways and the food was used to feed the staff and crew. This means that salad greens could possibly be grown in Antarctica or even the Mojave Desert. NASA has also looked to utilize hydroponics in the space program. Ray Wheeler, plant physiologist at Kennedy Space Center’s Space Life Science Lab, believes that hydroponics will create advances within space travel. He terms this as “a life support system with the biological component of growing plants—called a bioregenerative life support system. It has several benefits for NASA.” These Scientists are researching how different amounts of light, temperature and carbon dioxide, along with plant species can be grown and cultivated on planets like Mars.

Advantages

Some of the reasons why hydroponics is being adapted around the world for food production are the following:
  • No soil is needed
  • The water stays in the system and can be reused- thus, lower water costs
  • It is possible to control the nutrition levels in their entirety- thus, lower nutrition costs
  • No nutrition pollution is released into the environment because of the controlled system
  • Stable and high yields
  • Pests and diseases are easier to get rid of than in soil because of the container's mobility
Today, hydroponics is an established branch of agronomy. Progress has been rapid, and results obtained in various countries have proved it to be thoroughly practical and to have very definite advantages over conventional methods of horticulture. The two chief merits of the soil-less cultivation of plants are, first, much higher crop yields, and second, hydroponics can be used in places where in-ground agriculture or gardening is not possible.

Disadvantages

The hydroponic conditions (presence of fertilizer and high humidity) create an environment that stimulates salmonella growth.[6] Other disadvantages include pathogen attacks such as damp-off due to Verticillium wilt caused by the high moisture levels associated with hydroponics and overwatering of soil based plants. Also, many hydroponic plants require different fertilizers and containment systems[7]

Techniques

The two main types of hydroponics are solution culture and medium culture. Solution culture does not use a solid medium for the roots, just the nutrient solution. The three main types of solution culture are static solution culture, continuous flow solution culture and aeroponics. The medium culture method has a solid medium for the roots and is named for the type of medium, e.g. sand culture, gravel culture or rockwool culture. There are two main variations for each medium, subirrigation and top irrigation. For all techniques, most hydroponic reservoirs are now built of plastic but other materials have been used including concrete, glass, metal, vegetable solids and wood. The containers should exclude light to prevent algae growth in the nutrient solution.

Static solution culture

In static solution culture, plants are grown in containers of nutrient solution, such as glass Mason jars (typically in-home applications), plastic buckets, tubs or tanks. The solution is usually gently aerated but may be unaerated. If unaerated, the solution level is kept low enough that enough roots are above the solution so they get adequate oxygen. A hole is cut in the lid of the reservoir for each plant. There can be one to many plants per reservoir. Reservoir size can be increased as plant size increases. A homemade system can be constructed from plastic food containers or glass canning jars with aeration provided by an aquarium pump, aquarium airline tubing and aquarium valves. Clear containers are covered with aluminium foil, butcher paper, black plastic or other material to exclude light, thus helping to eliminate the formation of algae. The nutrient solution is either changed on a schedule, such as once per week, or when the concentration drops below a certain level as determined with an electrical conductivity meter. Whenever the solution is depleted below a certain level, either water or fresh nutrient solution is added, A Mariotte's bottle, or a float valve, can be used to automatically maintain the solution level. In raft solution culture, plants are placed in a sheet of buoyant plastic that is floated on the surface of the nutrient solution. That way, the solution level never drops below the roots.

Continuous flow solution culture

In continuous flow solution culture the nutrient solution constantly flows past the roots. It is much easier to automate than the static solution culture because sampling and adjustments to the temperature and nutrient concentrations can be made in a large storage tank that serves potentially thousands of plants. A popular variation is the nutrient film technique or NFT whereby a very shallow stream of water containing all the dissolved nutrients required for plant growth is recirculated past the bare roots of plants in a watertight thick root mat, which develops in the bottom of the channel, has an upper surface which, although moist, is in the air. Subsequently, there is an abundant supply of oxygen to the roots of the plants. A properly designed NFT system is based on using the right channel slope, the right flow rate and the right channel length. The main advantage of the NFT system over other forms of hydroponics is that the plant roots are exposed to adequate supplies of water, oxygen and nutrients. In all other forms of production there is a conflict between the supply of these requirements, since excessive or deficient amounts of one results in an imbalance of one or both of the others. NFT, because of its design, provides a system where all three requirements for healthy plant growth can be met at the same time, providing the simple concept of NFT is always remembered and practised. The result of these advantages is that higher yields of high quality produce are obtained over an extended period of cropping. A downside of NFT is that it has very little buffering against interruptions in the flow e.g. power outages, but overall, it is probably one of the more productive techniques.
The same design characteristics apply to all conventional NFT systems. While slopes along channels of 1:100 have been recommended, in practice it is difficult to build a base for channels that is sufficiently true to enable nutrient films to flow without ponding in locally depressed areas. Consequently, it is recommended that slopes of 1:30 to 1:40 are used. This allows for minor irregularities in the surface but, even with these slopes, ponding and waterlogging may occur. The slope may be provided by the floor, or benches or racks may hold the channels and provide the required slope. Both methods are used and depend on local requirements, often determined by the site and crop requirements.
As a general guide, flow rates for each gully should be 1 liter per minute. At planting, rates may be half this and the upper limit of 2L/min appears about the maximum. Flow rates beyond these extremes are often associated with nutritional problems. Depressed growth rates of many crops have been observed when channels exceed 12 metres in length. On rapidly growing crops, tests have indicated that, while oxygen levels remain adequate, nitrogen may be depleted over the length of the gully. Consequently, channel length should not exceed 10–15 metres. In situations where this is not possible, the reductions in growth can be eliminated by placing another nutrient feed half way along the gully and reducing flow rates to 1L/min through each outlet.

Aeroponics

Aeroponics is a system where roots are continuously or discontinuously kept in an environment saturated with fine drops (a mist or aerosol) of nutrient solution. The method requires no substrate and entails growing plants with their roots suspended in a deep air or growth chamber with the roots periodically wetted with a fine mist of atomized nutrients. Excellent aeration is the main advantage of aeroponics.
Aeroponic techniques have proved to be commercially successful for propagation, seed germination, seed potato production, tomato production, leaf crops and micro-greens.[8] Since inventor Richard Stoner commercialized aeroponic technology in 1983, aeroponics has been implemented as an alternative to water intensive hydroponic systems worldwide.[9] The limitation of hydroponics is the fact that 1 kg of water can only hold 8 mg of air, no matter if aerators are utilized or not.
Another distinct advantage of aeroponics over hydroponics is that any species of plants can be grown in a true aeroponic system because the micro environment of an aeroponic can be finely controlled. The limitation of hydroponics is that only certain species of plants can survive for so long in water before they become water logged. The advantage of aeroponics is due to the fact that suspended aeroponic plants receive 100% of the available oxygen and carbon dioxide to the roots zone, stems and leaves,[10] thus accelerating biomass growth and reducing rooting times. NASA research has shown that aeroponically grown plants have an 80% increase in dry weight biomass (essential minerals) compared to hydroponically grown plants. Aeroponics used 65% less water than hydroponics. NASA also concluded that aeroponically grown plants requires ¼ the nutrient input compared to hydroponics. Unlike hydroponically grown plants, aeroponically grown plants will not suffer transplant shock when transplanted to soil, and offers growers the ability to reduce the spread of disease and pathogens.[11] Aeroponics is also widely used in laboratory studies of plant physiology and plant pathology. Aeroponic techniques have been given special attention from NASA since a mist is easier to handle than a liquid in a zero gravity environment.

Passive subirrigation

Passive subirrigation, also known as passive hydroponics or semi-hydroponics, is a method where plants are grown in an inert porous medium that transports water and fertilizer to the roots by capillary action from a separate reservoir as necessary, reducing labor and providing a constant supply of water to the roots. In the simplest method, the pot sits in a shallow solution of fertilizer and water or on a capillary mat saturated with nutrient solution. The various hydroponic media available, such as expanded clay and coconut husk, contain more air space than more traditional potting mixes, delivering increased oxygen to the roots, which is important in epiphytic plants such as orchids and bromeliads, whose roots are exposed to the air in nature. Additional advantages of passive hydroponics are the reduction of root rot and the additional ambient humidity provided through evaporations.

Ebb and flow / Flood and drain subirrigation

In its simplest form, there is a tray above a reservoir of nutrient solution. The tray is either filled with growing medium (clay granules being the most common) and planted directly, or pots of medium stand in the tray. At regular intervals, a simple timer causes a pump to fill the upper tray with nutrient solution, after which the solution drains back down into the reservoir. This keeps the medium regularly flushed with nutrients and air. Once the upper tray fills past the drain stop it begins recirculating the water until the pump is turned off and the water in the upper tray drains back into the reservoirs.

Run to Waste

In a Run to Waste type system, nutrient and water solution is periodically applied to the medium surface. This may be done in its simplest form, by manually applying a nutrient and water solution one or more times per day in a container of inert growing media, such as rockwool, perlite, vermiculite, coco fibre, or sand. In a slightly more complex system, it is automated with a delivery pump, a timer and irrigation tubing to deliver nutrient solution with a delivery frequency that is governed by the key parameters of plant size, plant growing stage, climate, substrate, and substrate conductivity, pH, and water content.
In a commercial setting, watering frequency is multi factorial and governed by pc or plc based controllers.
Commercial hydroponics production of large plants like tomatoes, cucumber and peppers, use one form or another of run to waste hydroponics.
In environmentally responsible uses, the nutrient rich waste is collected and processed through an on site filtration system to be used many times, making the system very productive.[12][13]

Deep water culture

The hydroponic method of plant production by means of suspending the plant roots in a solution of nutrient rich, oxygenated water. Traditional methods favor the use of plastic buckets and large containers with the plant contained in a net pot suspended from the centre of the lid and the roots suspended in the nutrient solution. The solution is super oxygenated from an air pump combined with porous stones. With this method the plants grow much faster because of the high amount of oxygen that the roots receive.[14]

Bubbleponics

"Bubbleponics" is the art of delivering highly oxygenated nutrient solution direct to the root zone of plants. While Deep Water Culture involves the plant roots hanging down into a reservoir of water below, the term Bubbleponics describes a top-fed Deep Water Culture (DWC) hydroponic system. Basically, the water is pumped from the reservoir up to the roots (top feeding). The water is released over the plant's roots and then runs back into the reservoir below in a constantly recirculating system. As with Deep Water Culture, there is an airstone in the reservoir which pumps air into the water via a hose from outside the reservoir. The airstone helps add oxygen to the water. Both the airstone and the water pump run 24 hours a day.
The biggest advantages with Bubbleponics over Deep Water Culture involve increased growth during the first few weeks. With Deep Water Culture, there is a time where the roots haven't reached the water yet. With Bubbleponics, the roots get easy access to water from the beginning and will grow to the reservoir below much more quickly than with a Deep Water Culture system. Once the roots have reached the reservoir below, there is not a huge advantage with Bubbleponics over Deep Water Culture. However, due to the quicker growth in the beginning, a few weeks of grow time can be shaved off.[15]

Media

One of the most obvious decisions hydroponic farmers have to make is which medium they should use. Different media are appropriate for different growing techniques.

Diahydro

Sedimentary rock medium that consists of the fossilized remains of diatoms. Diahydro is extremely high in Silica (87-94%), an essential component for the growth of plants and strengthening of cell walls.

Expanded clay (Ex-clay)

Enlarge picture
Hydroton brand expanded clay pebbles.
Baked clay pellets, also known under the trademarks 'Hydroton' or 'Hydrokorrels' or 'LECA' (lightweight expanded clay aggregate), are suitable for hydroponic systems in which all nutrients are carefully controlled in water solution. The clay pellets are inert, pH neutral and do not contain any nutrient value.
The clay is formed into round pellets and fired in rotary kilns at 1,200 °C (2,190 °F). This causes the clay to expand, like popcorn, and become porous. It is light in weight, and does not compact over time. Shape of individual pellet can be irregular or uniform depending on brand and manufacturing process. The manufacturers consider expanded clay to be an ecologically sustainable and re-usable growing medium because of its ability to be cleaned and sterilized, typically by washing in solutions of white vinegar, chlorine bleach or hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), and rinsing completely.
A less popular view is that clay pebbles are best not re-used even when they are cleaned, due to root growth which may enter the medium. Breaking open a clay pebble after a crop has been grown will reveal this growth.

Rock wool

Rock wool (mineral wool) is probably the most widely used medium in hydroponics. Rock Wool is an inert substrate for both 'free drainage' and recirculating systems. It is made from molten rock spun into cotton candy-like fibers, resulting in a fibrous medium accessible to capillary action that is not degraded by microbiological activity. Advantages are that rock wool is light weight, free of pathogens, it has very low CEC (Cations exchange capacity) making nutrients and water readily available, and it comes in different fiber sizes and orientations. Higher density rock wool also improves the wicking and dispersion of moisture and nutrients, enticing roots into more areas of the medium, and therefore increasing nutrient fueled sites for premium plant production. After usage, rock wool can be recycled into bricks or into new rock wool again, and or incorporated into soil because it is made of natural rocks and contains great amount of fertilizer left within it.

Coir

Coco Peat, also known as coir or coco, is the leftover material after the fibres have been removed from the outermost shell (bolster) of the coconut. Coir is a 100% natural grow and flowering medium. Coconut Coir is colonized with trichoderma bacteria which protects roots and stimulates root growth. It is extremely difficult to over water coir due to its perfect air to water ratio, plant roots thrive in this environment, coir has a high cation exchange, meaning it can store unused minerals to be released to the plant as and when it requires it. Coir is available in many forms, most common is coco peat which has the appearance and texture of soil but contains no mineral content.

Perlite

Perlite is a volcanic rock that has been superheated into very lightweight expanded glass pebbles. It is used loose or in plastic sleeves immersed in the water. It is also used in potting soil mixes to decrease soil density. Perlite has similar properties and uses to vermiculite but generally holds more air and less water. If not contained, it can float if flood and drain feeding is used. It is a fusion of granite, obsidian, pumice and basalt. This volcanic rock is naturally fused at high temperatures undergoing what is called "Fusionic Metamorphosis".

Vermiculite

Like perlite, vermiculite is another mineral that has been superheated until it has expanded into light pebbles. Vermiculite holds more water than perlite and has a natural "wicking" property that can draw water and nutrients in a passive hydroponic system. If too much water and not enough air surrounds the plants roots, it's possible to gradually lower the medium's water-retention capability by mixing in increasing quantities of perlite.

Sand

Sand is cheap and easily available. However, it is heavy, does not hold water very well, and it must be sterilized between use.

Gravel

The same type that is used in aquariums, though any small gravel can be used, provided it is washed first. Indeed, plants growing in a typical traditional gravel filter bed, with water circulated using electric powerhead pumps, are in effect being grown using gravel hydroponics. Gravel is inexpensive, easy to keep clean, drains well and won't become waterlogged. However, it is also heavy, and if the system doesn't provide continuous water, the plant roots may dry out.

Brick shards

Brick shards have similar properties to gravel. They have the added disadvantages of possibly altering the pH and requiring extra cleaning before reuse.

Polystyrene packing peanuts

Polystyrene packing peanuts are inexpensive, readily available, and have excellent drainage. However, they can be too lightweight for some uses. They are mainly used in closed tube systems. Note that polystyrene peanuts must be used; biodegradable packing peanuts will decompose into a sludge. Plants may absorb styrene and pass it to their consumers; this is a possible health risk.

Wood fiber

Wood fiber, produced from steam friction of wood, is a very efficient organic substrate for hydroponics. It has the advantage that it keeps its structure for a very long time.

Nutrient solutions

Plant nutrients used in hydroponics are dissolved in the water and are mostly in inorganic and ionic form. Primary among the dissolved cations (positively charged ions) are Ca2+ (calcium), Mg2+ (magnesium), and K+ (potassium); the major nutrient anions in nutrient solutions are NO
3
(nitrate), SO2−
4
(sulfate), and H2PO
4
(dihydrogen phosphate).
Numerous 'recipes' for hydroponic solutions are available. Many use different combinations of chemicals to reach similar total final compositions. Commonly used chemicals for the macronutrients include potassium nitrate, calcium nitrate, potassium phosphate, and magnesium sulfate. Various micronutrients are typically added to hydroponic solutions to supply essential elements; among them are Fe (iron), Mn (manganese), Cu (copper), Zn (zinc), B (boron), Cl (chlorine), and Ni (nickel). Chelating agents are sometimes used to keep Fe soluble. Many variations of the nutrient solutions used by Arnon and Hoagland (see above) have been styled 'modified Hoagland solutions' and are widely used. Variation of different mixes throughout the plant life cycle, further optimizes its nutritional value.[16] Plants will change the composition of the nutrient solutions upon contact by depleting specific nutrients more rapidly than others, removing water from the solution, and altering the pH by excretion of either acidity or alkalinity.[17] Care is required not to allow salt concentrations to become too high, nutrients to become too depleted, or pH to wander far from the desired value.

Commercial

Enlarge picture
An Aerogarden using hydroponics and aeroponics.
The largest commercial hydroponics facility in the world is Eurofresh Farms in Willcox, Arizona, which sold 200 million kilograms of tomatoes in 2008.[18] Eurofresh has 318 hectares under glass and represents about a third of the commercial hydroponic greenhouse area in the U.S.[19] Eurofresh does not consider its tomatoes organic, but they are pesticide-free. They are grown in rockwool using the run to waste technique.
Some commercial installations use no pesticides or herbicides, preferring integrated pest management techniques. There is often a price premium willingly paid by consumers for produce which is labeled "organic". Some states in the USA require soil as an essential to obtain organic certification. There are also overlapping and somewhat contradictory rules established by the US Federal Government, so some food grown with hydroponics can be certified organic.
Hydroponics also saves water; it uses as little as 1&fras1;20 the amount as a regular farm to produce the same amount of food. The water table can be impacted by the water use and run-off of chemicals from farms, but hydroponics may minimize impact as well as having the advantage that water use and water returns are easier to measure. This can save the farmer money by allowing reduced water use and the ability to measure consequences to the land around a farm.
To increase plant growth, lighting systems such as metal halide for growing stage only or high pressure sodium for growing/flowering/blooming stage are used to lengthen the day or to supplement natural sunshine if it is scarce. Metal halide emits more light in the blue spectrum, making it ideal for plant growth but is harmful to unprotected skin and can cause skin cancer. High pressure sodium emits more light in the red spectrum, meaning that it is best suited for supplementing natural sunshine and can be used throughout the growing cycle. However, these lighting systems require large amounts of electricity to operate, making efficiency and safety very critical.
The environment in a hydroponics greenhouse is tightly controlled for maximum efficiency and this new mindset is called soil-less/controlled-environment agriculture (CEA). With this growers can make ultra-premium foods anywhere in the world, regardless of temperature and growing seasons. Growers monitor the temperature, humidity, and pH level constantly.
Hydroponics have been used to enhance vegetables to provide more nutritional value. A hydroponic farmer in Virginia has developed a calcium and potassium enriched head of lettuce, scheduled to be widely available in April 2007. Grocers in test markets have said that the lettuce sells "very well", and the farmers claim that their hydroponic lettuce uses 90% less water than traditional soil farming.[20]

Advancements

With pest problems reduced, and nutrients constantly fed to the roots, productivity in hydroponics is high, although plant growth can be limited by the low levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, or limited light exposure. To increase yield further, some sealed greenhouses inject carbon dioxide into their environment to help growth (CO2 enrichment), add lights to lengthen the day, or control vegetative growth etc.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Douglas, James S. Hydroponics. 5th ed. Bombay: Oxford UP, 1975. 1-3.
  2. ^ http://www.techno-preneur.net/information-desk/sciencetech-magazine/2007/jan07/Hydroponics.pdf
  3. ^ Turner, Bambi. "How Hydroponics Works." 20 October 2008. HowStuffWorks.com. <http://home.howstuffworks.com/hydroponics.htm> 17 September 2009.
  4. ^ The Water Culture Method for Growing Plants Without Soil
  5. ^ [1] Hydroponics Group Industry
  6. ^ 10:49 a.m. ET (2009-03-04). "Alfalfa Sprouts Source Of Salmonella, Experts Say - Omaha- msnbc.com". MSNBC. Retrieved 2009-03-14.
  7. ^ Winterborne, J., "Hydroponics: Indoor Horticulture",Published by Pukka Press, 2005, p113.
  8. ^ "Research News, "Commercial Aeroponics: The Grow Anywere Story", In Vitro Report - An Official Publication of the Society In Vitro Biology, Issue 42.2, April–June 2008".
  9. ^ "Stoner, R., "Aeroponics Versus Bed and Hydroponic Propagation", Florist Review, Vol 173 no.4477, September 22, 1983".
  10. ^ Stoner, R.J (1983). Rooting in Air. Greenhouse Grower Vol I No. 11
  11. ^ Aeroponics
  12. ^ http://www.grodan.com/solutions/water+content+meter
  13. ^ http://www.newagehydro.com/shop/faq.php
  14. ^ "Deep Water Culture". Growell.
  15. ^ "Growing Cannabis with Bubbleponics". GrowWeedEasy.com. Retrieved 2010-09-27.
  16. ^ Coston, D.C., G.W. Krewer, R.C. Owing and E.G. Denny (1983). Air Rooting of Peach Semihardwood Cutting." HortScience 18(3): 323.
  17. ^ Understanding pH DutchMaster Hydroponics
  18. ^ Kenney, Brad P. "Success Under Glass." American Vegetable Grower 1 May 2006: 12-13.
  19. ^ Sorenson, Dan. "Pampered tomatoes." Arizona daily star 23 April 2006.[2]
  20. ^ Murphy, Katie. "Farm Grows Hydroponic Lettuce." The Observer 1 December 2006 [3]
D&T HYDROPONIC http://dthydroponic.com

External links


This article is copied from an article on Wikipedia® - the free encyclopedia created and edited by online user community. The text was not checked or edited by anyone on our staff. Although the vast majority of the Wikipedia® encyclopedia articles provide accurate and timely information please do not assume the accuracy of any particular article. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License.


How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content.

Link to this page:

Firefox 3.6 Release Notes v.3.6.23, released September 27th, 2011
Check out what’s new, the known issues and frequently asked questions about the latest version of Firefox. As always, you’re encouraged to tell us what you think, either using this feedback form or by filing a bug in Bugzilla.

What’s New in Firefox 3.6.23

Firefox 3.6.23 fixes the following issues found in previous versions of Firefox 3.6:

Firefox 3.6.x will be maintained with security and stability updates for a short amount of time. All users are strongly encouraged to upgrade to the latest version of Firefox.
http://www.mozilla.org/img/covehead/firefox/background-all.png

Find the Firefox 3.6 release in your language.

Fully Localized Versions

Language Version Windows Mac OS X Linux



Afrikaans Afrikaans 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Albanian Shqip 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Arabic عربي 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Assamese অসমীয়া 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Basque Euskara 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Belarusian Беларуская 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Bengali (Bangladesh) বাংলা (বাংলাদেশ) 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Bengali (India) বাংলা (ভারত) 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Bulgarian Български 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Catalan català 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Chinese (Simplified) 中文 (简体) 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Chinese (Traditional) 正體中文 (繁體) 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Croatian Hrvatski 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Czech Čeština 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Danish Dansk 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Dutch Nederlands 3.6.23 Download Download Download
English (British) English (British) 3.6.23 Download Download Download
English (US) English (US) 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Esperanto Esperanto 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Estonian Eesti keel 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Finnish suomi 3.6.23 Download Download Download
French Français 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Frisian Frysk 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Galician Galego 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Georgian ქართული 3.6.23 Download Download Download
German Deutsch 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Greek Ελληνικά 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Gujarati ગુજરાતી 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Hebrew עברית 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Hindi (India) हिन्दी (भारत) 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Hungarian Magyar 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Icelandic íslenska 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Indonesian Bahasa Indonesia 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Irish (Ireland) Gaeilge (Éire) 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Italian Italiano 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Japanese 日本語 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Kannada ಕನ್ನಡ 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Korean 한국어 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Latvian Latviešu 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Lithuanian lietuvių kalba 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Macedonian Македонски 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Malayalam മലയാളം 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Marathi मराठी 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Norwegian (Bokmål) Norsk bokmål 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Norwegian (Nynorsk) Norsk nynorsk 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Occitan (Lengadocian) occitan (lengadocian) 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Persian فارسی 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Polish Polski 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Portuguese (Brazilian) Português (do Brasil) 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Portuguese (Portugal) Português (Europeu) 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Punjabi ਪੰਜਾਬੀ 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Romanian română 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Russian Русский 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Serbian Српски 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Sinhala සිංහල 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Slovak slovenčina 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Slovenian Slovenščina 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Spanish (Argentina) Español (de Argentina) 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Spanish (Chile) Español (de Chile) 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Spanish (Mexico) Español (de México) 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Spanish (Spain) Español (de España) 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Swedish Svenska 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Telugu తెలుగు 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Thai ไทย 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Turkish Türkçe 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Ukrainian Українська 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Vietnamese Tiếng Việt 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Welsh Cymraeg 3.6.23 Download Download Download

New Localized Builds

These localized builds are in beta and may contain translation errors.
Language Version Windows Mac OS X Linux



Kazakh Қазақ 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Kurdish Kurdî 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Oriya ଓଡ଼ିଆ 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Romansh rumantsch 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Tamil தமிழ் 3.6.23 Download Download Download
Tamil (Sri Lanka) தமிழ் (இலங்கை) 3.6.23 Download Download Download

Language Packs

Mozilla offers download links to the following language add-ons built by the open source community. These are not full installs of Firefox 3.6 and thus require you to have Firefox 3.6 already.
Language Download


Friulian Furlan Download
Tatar Tatarça Download

The Image Rotator contains a small javascript API. It can be enabled by setting the flashvar enablejs=true. When set, the rotator can be controlled by calling the function sendEvent() on the rotator. Additionally, the rotator will automatically send updates to a global getUpdate() javascript function.

enablejs

Here's an example of an embed code that enables the rotator javascript API:

    src="rotator.swf" 
    width="300" 
    height="300" 
    flashvars="file=playlist.xml&enablejs=true"
    name="rotator"
    id="rotator"
/>

    src = "rotator.swf"
    width = "300"
    height = "300"
    FlashVars = "file = playlist.xml & enablejs = true"
    nama = "rotator"
    id = "rotator"
/>

    src="rotator.swf" 
    width="300" 
    height="300" 
    flashvars="file=playlist.xml&enablejs=true"
    name="rotator"
    id="rotator"
/>
The enablejs=true flashvar turns on the API. The name and id flashvar give the rotator a unique ID in the HTML DOM, so its sendEvent function can be called.

sendEvent

The sendEvent function can be directly called upon the rotator. If thename and id of the rotator is set to rotator (as in the above embed code), events can be sent like this:
function next() {
    // make the imagerotator jump to the next image.
    document.getElementById('rotator').sendEvent('next');
};

    / / Make the leap to the next image imagerotator.
    document.getElementById ('rotator') sendEvent ('next').;
};

    // make the imagerotator jump to the next image.
    document.getElementById('rotator').sendEvent('next');
};

    // make the imagerotator jump to the next image.
    document.getElementById('rotator').sendEvent('next');
};
The following events are available:
  • getlink (index): redirect the browser to the link of photo number index.
  • next: jump to the next image.
  • playitem ( index ): jump to image number index .
  • playpause: pause or resume the rotator (acts like a toggle).
  • prev: jump to the previous image.
  • volume (percent): set the volume of the audiotrack to percent (provided you use an audiotrack).

getUpdate

When the enablejs=true flashvar is set, the rotator automatically sends status updates to javascript. In order to receive those, you need to define a javascript function called getUpdate on your page:
function getUpdate(type,parameter1,parameter2) { 
    alert('Received a '+type+' update from the rotator');
    alert('Parameters: '+parameter1+' - '+ parameter2);
};

    alert ('Accept' + type + 'update of the rotator');
    alert ('Parameter:' paramater1 + + '-' + parameter2);
};

    alert('Received a '+type+' update from the rotator');
    alert('Parameters: '+parameter1+' - '+ parameter2);
};
The rotator sends the following types of updates:
  • item (index): the rotator switches to image number index.
  • load (percent): the current image is loaded for percent percent.
  • size (width,height): the current image has the dimensions width by height.
  • state (index): the current playback state is state, whereby the state can be the following:
    • 0: the rotatot is paused.
    • 1: the rotator is buffering for playback.
    • 2: the rotator is playing.
    • 3: the rotator has completed playback.
    • 4: the rotator is idle; has not started yet.
  • time (elapsed,remaining): the rotator has played the current image for elapsed seconds and has remaining seconds to go yet.
  • volume (percent): the current volume of the rotator is percent.
ImageRotatorApi – JW Player

Author Name

{picture#YOUR_PROFILE_PICTURE_URL} YOUR_PROFILE_DESCRIPTION {facebook#YOUR_SOCIAL_PROFILE_URL} {twitter#YOUR_SOCIAL_PROFILE_URL} {google#YOUR_SOCIAL_PROFILE_URL} {pinterest#YOUR_SOCIAL_PROFILE_URL} {youtube#YOUR_SOCIAL_PROFILE_URL} {instagram#YOUR_SOCIAL_PROFILE_URL}

Contact Form

Name

Email *

Message *

Powered by Blogger.