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- RTLS Glossary: Real-Time Locating Terms Explained | Cavea
RTLS Glossary: the key terms of real-time locating systems
- 46 Terms
- Updated June 2026
- From A to Z
Content
Related Guides
What is RTLS?
The Ultimate Guide to Real-Time Location Tracking
omlox
The open standard for interoperability
A
Update-Rate
Specifies how often a new position is determined. A high update rate is important for fast-moving objects and real-time control, but it increases the tags’ power consumption and thus affects battery life.
Anchor
AoA (Angle of Arrival)
A method for determining position based on the angle of arrival of a radio signal. Special receivers, called locators, measure the angle from which a signal arrives. AoA achieves a high degree of accuracy, with a margin of error of less than one meter.
Asset Tracking
The continuous tracking and monitoring of movable valuables such as tools, containers, vehicles, or equipment. RTLS provides the real-time location data for this purpose.
B
Battery Life
The amount of time a battery-powered Tag or Anchor operates without needing to be replaced or recharged. This is a key factor in total cost of ownership, as replacing thousands of batteries can be expensive. Cavea Mesh achieves up to 10 years of battery life.
Beacon
BLE (Bluetooth Low Energy)
A cost-effective and energy-efficient wireless technology. BLE is often evaluated based on signal strength (RSSI) and is suitable for applications requiring moderate accuracy, such as zone or room-level localization. When combined with BLE AoA, accuracy increases.
BLE 6.0
The 2024 version of the Bluetooth standard. The most important feature for location tracking is “Channel Sounding,” a method for precisely measuring the distance between two Bluetooth devices using the standard 2.4-GHz band.
C
Cavea Mesh
Channel Sounding
A distance measurement method introduced with BLE 6.0 that determines the distance between two devices using two methods: Phase-Based Ranging (analysis of the phase difference across multiple frequencies) and Round-Trip Timing (measurement of the signal’s round-trip time). The two methods can be combined, which improves the accuracy, reliability, and security of the measurement. Depending on the environment, Channel Sounding achieves an accuracy in the range of a few decimeters, positioning BLE as a distance measurement option between classic BLE (RSSI) and UWB.
Complementary Zone
D
Digital Twin
Dilution of Precision (DOP)
E
Echtzeit-Ortungssystem
eKanban
G
Gateway
A gateway is not a direct receiver of tag signals. It typically receives data from Anchorn and forwards the determined location data—for example, to the cloud. Cavea Mesh, among others, uses this architecture.
Geofencing
GPS
Satellite-based positioning for outdoor use. GPS complements indoor RTLS technologies in areas where no indoor infrastructure is available.
I
IIoT (Industrial Internet of Things)
Indoor-Navigation
Guiding people or vehicles within buildings where GPS does not work reliably. RTLS technologies such as AoA or UWB provide the necessary location data.
L
Latency
The time interval between a movement and the updated position becoming available in the system. Low latency is crucial for applications that must respond in real time, such as collision avoidance.
Location Engine
Locator
M
Mesh-Technology
O
omlox
omlox air-interface
omlox Core Zone
omlox Hub
P
PBR (Phase-Based Ranging)
A method for measuring distance in which the distance is calculated based on the phase difference of a radio signal across multiple frequencies. A transmitter sends out a signal, a receiver sends it back, and this process is repeated across multiple frequencies; the distance is determined from the phase differences between the transmitted and received signals. Phase-based distance measurement is used in various radio systems and is, among other things, one of the two methods used in Bluetooth channel sounding.
Precision
R
RFID (Radio-Frequency Identification)
RSSI (Received Signal Strength Indicator)
RTLS (Real-Time Locating System)
RTT (Round-Trip Timing)
A method for measuring distance based on the time it takes for a signal to travel between two devices (round trip). The distance is calculated from the transmission time and the reception time. The same basic principle also underlies Two-Way Ranging (TWR); in Bluetooth Channel Sounding, RTT is one of the two measurement methods.
S
Satellite
Line-of-sight (LOS and NLOS)
SLAM (Simultaneous Localization and Mapping)
A process in which a system localizes itself while simultaneously creating a map of its surroundings. In the omlox standard, SLAM is defined as a separate, self-localizing zone and is relevant for the coordination of humans and machines as well as for autonomous mobile robots.
Switch (Network-Switch)
An active network device that connects the wired components of an RTLS system and forwards data traffic between them. Fixed locators or satellites are often connected via a switch, which can also supply them with power via Power over Ethernet (PoE).
T
Tag
TCO (Total Cost of Ownership)
TDoA (Time Difference of Arrival)
Time of Flight (ToF)
Tribrid-Tag
A Cavea Tag that combines multiple technologies in a single device, such as AoA or UWB along with Cavea Mesh, BLE, and RFID. This allows a single piece of hardware to meet a variety of accuracy requirements.
Trilateration and Multilateration
TWR (Two-Way Ranging)
U
UWB (Ultra-Wideband)
A highly precise wireless technology for positioning with accuracy ranging from a few centimeters to decimeters. UWB uses the time of flight (ToF) and is the technology behind the omlox Core Zone.
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