Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. 24/7 Space News .




GPS NEWS
Locata Unveils World's First GPS-style Indoor Positioning Solution
by Staff Writers
Portland OR (SPX) Sep 27, 2011


Timetenna initial tests in a steel shed, 2010. The prisms on the test systems for the laser total station provide a high-accuracy truth.

Locata Corporation has announced it will unveil the TimeTenna, a breakthrough positioning antenna technology that - for the first time - allows centimeter-accurate, GPS-style positioning indoors.

Building on the company's ground-breaking new terrestrial positioning system, the Locata technology will enable new high-accuracy positioning, machine automation and robotics applications indoors and is initially aimed at warehousing and industrial applications.

The company is demonstrating this revolutionary new technology in a ballroom deep inside Portland'sOregon Convention Center, the venue for this year's prestigious Institute of Navigation (ION) GNSS Conference.

Locata's unique high-accuracy terrestrial positioning technology LocataNet is already deployed outdoors by partners such as Leica Geosystems and organizations including the U.S. Air Force.

Locata's new indoor solution will enable businesses to automate, locate and direct equipment such as forklifts and other machinery in radio navigation settings where it has previously been impossible.

Locata has already taken steps to begin miniaturizing the core antenna technology to ultimately allow high-accuracy positioning indoors for personal devices like mobile phones.

"Today, Locata is instrumental in delivering the future of positioning technology, creating 'indoor GPS' that is just as complete and accurate as traditional outdoor GPS," said Nunzio Gambale, Chairman and CEO of Locata.

"After years of development and testing, we have architected the only system in the world capable of providing precision positioning across large indoor areas where GPS signals can't reach."

To accomplish this incredible technical breakthrough, David Small, Locata's co-founder, has had to overcome the problem of multipath - the fact that radio signals bounce chaotically indoors and therefore become impossible to track correctly.

"Multipath has always been the bane of high-accuracy radio positioning indoors," continued Gambale.

"And I can sincerely say David has created a historic world-first with this invention of a completely new type of antenna that mitigates multipath. The TimeTenna is utterly unique in the way that it works."

Satellite-based GPS signals were not designed to reach indoors and are therefore unable to pass through even minor obstructions. When this is added to multipath conditions with signals bouncing repeatedly off walls and/or other objects, accurate and reliable positioning becomes impossible.

Locata's patented Correlator Beam Forming technology, The Small TimeTenna, named after its creator David Small, is the first system to overcome this multipath interference to enable accurate positioning indoors.

"It's very hard for a layman to appreciate just how difficult multipath is to overcome," said Gambale.

"In positioning and radio circles it's regularly called 'the devil' because it's everywhere and impossible to defeat. Most engineers are in awe of David and the Locata team's accomplishment. In the past few weeks, as we've begun to show select groups how it's done, the accolades flowing to our team have been truly unstinting."

Professor Chris Rizos, Head of the School of Surveying and Spatial Information Systems, University of New South Wales, and globally respected President of the International Association of Geodesy, recently stated in a blog post: "[Locata's] antenna is really cool. Grown engineers go weak at the knees and gaze off into the distance when the principles are explained to them."

The TimeTenna versions Locata is showing at ION are about the size of a soccer ball and designed for machine automation use.

The Locata team is now focused on taking this technology all the way to an iPhone. "If the industry thinks the TimeTenna they're seeing today is too good to be true, just wait until they see what's coming next," added Gambale.

The TimeTenna technology will be unveiled, demonstrated and explained in detail at the GNSS 2011 Conference. Locata will be hosting several invitation-only and a limited number of public demonstrations.

Tickets to public demonstrations are first come, first served, and will be available at Locata's stand "L" on the exhibit floor.

Locata also today released an Interface Control Document (ICD) which defines the requirements related to the interface for the company's ground-based positioning system. More details on the ICD can be found at www.locatacorp.com

Next, Locata will bring to market a commercialized version of the technology through select integration partners.

.


Related Links
Locata
GPS Applications, Technology and Suppliers






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








GPS NEWS
Swedish daycare to test GPS for tracking kids
Stockholm (AFP) Sept 21, 2011
A daycare centre in the southern Swedish city of Malmoe said Wednesday it planned to test GPS devices for tracking children when they are out on excursions. "We will test this system on 10 children for a week in October. We will have 10 GPS transmitters attached to their reflective vests when we're outside the nursery school," explained Karin Werholt, who runs the Kronprinsen (Crown Prince) ... read more


GPS NEWS
China to launch moon-landing probe around 2013

United Launch Alliance Launches GRAIL Spacecrafts To Moon

NASA launches twin spacecraft to study Moon's core

Second bid to launch NASA's Moon-bound spacecraft

GPS NEWS
Russia to resume deep space explorations with Phobos expedition

Opportunity Continues to Study Chester Lake Rock Outcrop

Young Clays on Mars Could Have Been Habitable Regions

Opportunity on verge of new discovery

GPS NEWS
Students Participate in Plant Investigation With Space Station Crew

NASA Completes Orion Spacecraft Parachute Testing In Arizona

NASA Posts Global Exploration Roadmap

NASA to fund 'space taxis'

GPS NEWS
Chang'e-2 sends data back from L2

Mythbusting for Tiangong

Tiangong-1 launch will pave way for China's first space station

China to launch unmanned space module by Sept 30

GPS NEWS
Private US capsule not to dock with ISS

Crew safely returns to Earth after crash

Russia postpones next manned launch to ISS

Russia announces launch of 2 spacecraft in Oct-Nov

GPS NEWS
Sea Launch resumes operations after 2-year break

Ariane 5 marks fifth launch for 2011

Countdown to first Soyuz launch at Kourou under way

Ariane rocket launches satellites after strike delay

GPS NEWS
From the Comfort of Home, Web Users May Have Found New Planets

Rocky Planets Could Have Been Born as Gas Giants

How Common Are Earth-Moon Planetary Systems

From Star Wars to Science Fact: Tatooine-Like Planet Discovered

GPS NEWS
Lehigh University ceramics researchers shed light on metal embrittlement

ECIT researchers use liquid crystals to replace space motors

Samsung says 10 million Galaxy S II handsets sold

Apple argues iPad case in Australia tablet row




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement