Recent studies have highlighted that, on average, we spend approximately 90% of our time indoors, often in unfamiliar environments. Being able to seamlessly locate people or objects within indoor AND outdoor spaces could enable a number of new Location-Based Services (LBS) of significant economic relevance. In some cases, such as in modern hospitals and health care centres, efficient and accurate “asset” tracking and management (be this medical staff, patients, visitors, equipment etc.) is extremely important in economic as well as in social terms.
Such location services require having access to Geographic Information (GI) of outdoor and –most notably– indoor spaces. While outdoor data can be easily accessed as Open Data (OD), a notable example being OpenStreetMap (OSM), the availability of Geographical Information of indoor spaces is not available on a large scale as Open Data. In case of publicly accessible buildings, such as hospitals, stations, airports, shopping malls and public offices, having access to geographical data of indoor spaces, and particularly as Open Data, could allow new business activities and bring a number of social benefits.
The consortium gathers 24 partners, including technical developers, final users and technical partners providing support to final users as well as other partners in charge of horizontal activities such as definition of business models, exploitation and dissemination activities.
Location-Based Services (LBS) have traditionally targeted outdoor spaces based on technologies such as GPS, GLONASS, EGNOS and Galileo. Over the past few years, increasingly accurate indoor localisation technologies, based on technologies such as Bluetooth, ZigBee and Wi-Fi have expanded the scope of LBS to include indoor spaces. The variety of technologies available is currently not addressed by existing software frameworks. For this reason i-locate will develop an extendible software “toolkit” that will allow creation of Location Based Services regardless of the underlying technologies and of the context (if indoor or outdoor). To do so it will create an abstraction level on top of location technologies based on open standards. Existing standards will be extended to consider specific requirements of indoor scenarios and to ensure sound privacy and security policies, for the highest protection of personal/critical data.
The LBS that will be developed by i-locate will be accessed from applications for mobile devices (smartphones, tablets) that will complement the service toolkit and allowing also crowdsourcing of information regarding indoor spaces as open data. It should be noted that, although there are a number of companies focusing on indoor LBS, there is no such technological ecosystem in the market.
In addition, i-locate will also deliver a public portal for indoor open GI, which could be regarded as the indoor counterpart of OpenStreetMap, ensuring provision of an adequate set of open data providing detailed knowledge of the interior geography of a space. The portal will allow easy discoverability, access and sharing through the Internet of open GI related to publicly accessible indoor spaces.
The portal is expected to grow far beyond the boundaries of the pilots. This will create a significant impact at the EU level facilitating start-up of businesses based on indoor mapping data of publicly available spaces.
Accurate seamless indoor and outdoor tracking of people and objects is extremely important in a number of domains (e.g. logistics, mobility, smart city services, health, retail etc.). To this extent it can be said that the i-locate toolkit will be applicable horizontally to all these domains although the selected pilot sites will focus on a few specific application domains for which the project will also develop end-user Apps: health, public services and cultural applications.
To create a public geoportal for open indoor geographical information.
To extend current open standards to support indoor/outdoor LBS.
To develop an open source “toolkit” for indoor-outdoor LBS.
To develop Apps for the pilot scenarios.
To test the “virtual hub” and the “toolkit” in 13 pilots sites in 8 EU countries.
To promote openness and awareness-rising activities.
To stimulate innovation and business activities around indoor Geographic Information.
Core localization services
Generic LBS Enablers:
Specific LBS Enablers:
At the moment, version 1.0 of the i-locate toolkit, the following modules are available. To be able to access to code repositories, please register here!
GitLab REPOSITORY – Toolkit v1.0 | |
Module | Link |
PROXY | https://gitlab.com/ilocate-middleware-proxy.git |
SERVICE BUS | https://gitlab.com/ilocate/ilocate-middleware-service-bus.git |
OGC SPATIAL | https://gitlab.com/ilocate-middleware-ogc-spatial.git |
SPATIAL SOLVER | https://gitlab.com/ilocate/ilocate-middleware-spatial-solver.git |
ASSET MANAGEMENT | https://gitlab.com/ilocate/ilocate-middleware-asset-management.git |
ROUTING | https://gitlab.com/ilocate/ilocate-middleware-routing.git |
OUTDOOR LOCALIZATION | https://gitlab.com/ilocate/ilocate-middleware-outdoor-localization.git |
CONFIGURATION | https://gitlab.com/ilocate/ilocate-middleware-configuration.git |
Project home page: http://www.i-locate.eu
LinkedIn group: http://www.linkedin.com/groups?gid=7434810
YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFaYoRUwrRQNBwUIWqfUjYg
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