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Is it possible to discover Gimbal beacons using the iOS SDK? I want to use simple ranging but I don't know the UUID of the transmitter.

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  • Do the Gimbal beacons use the iBeacon API, or some other BLE API? Apple's location manager ranging code will only work if it's a true iBeacon. You'll have to roll your own ranging code if it's not using iBeacons.
    – Duncan C
    Jan 23, 2014 at 19:58
  • No, they have a different API (their own SDK). Using the Android app mentioned by davidhelms, I was not able to discover this beacon.
    – Mihai Popa
    Jan 24, 2014 at 8:08

4 Answers 4

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YES, you can use Gimbals as iBeacons. You have to re-configure it using iBeacon configuration. Login to Gimbal website, create an account if you don't have one. https://proximity.gimbal.com/

Open Proximity tab. Click on Manage Configuration button at the top and create new configuration, select iBeacon as beacon type, assign UUID, major and minor. You can choose any UUID you'd like.

Now register your Gimbal beacon, and select your new configuration. You must open the beacon to get to the Factory ID that is required to register.

Download Gimbal manager app for iPhone, open it, select "Configure" option. Open Gimbal and remove battery, put the batter back in, and you should see your beacon in the Gimbal Manager app, click the Update button.

That's it, now you your Gimbal is in iBeacon mode.

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  • 1
    Any idea why I can't find that Gimbal manager app from the app store on an iPod touch? According to the listing at itunes.apple.com/us/app/gimbal-beacon-manager/id785688563?mt=8 the app should be compatible with ipod touch. It runs iOS 7.1.1, maybe that's the issue!? May 20, 2014 at 9:24
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    And here's a great set of instructions with images: gimbal.com/doc/ios_proximity_ibeacon_quickstart.html May 25, 2014 at 2:49
  • I am currently using Gimbal sdk, but i dont have any gimbal device, i just want to test sdk by configuring my iphone as a ibeacon transmitter. I followed the steps in the answer but still i am unable to detect my device as a beacon. May 29, 2014 at 7:06
  • @Rahul Mathur I don't think you can configure the settings of an iPhone acting as a beacon ,since only the configuration of Gimbal beacon can be changed using that.
    – Siddharth
    Aug 13, 2014 at 8:53
  • @Sergey Your instructions make sense, but what I'm not clear about is whether you can now find the beacons using Core Location alone, or whether you still need the Gimbal SDK after following your directions.
    – Axeva
    Dec 5, 2014 at 18:52
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If anyone interested, I found this useful post on http://beekn.net/2013/12/inside-gimbal-qualcomm-beacons-tackle-bluetooth-le-challenges/:

Actually, you can’t sniff the iBeacon UUID as Gimbal use their own implementation for their beacons. They use BLE to transmit encrypted IDs that change with each broadcast, so it needs to validate with the SDK / API to confirm which beacon ID this ties up to.

update: davidyoung is right. There is some info that I skipped in Gimbal's documentation:

If your application's use case requires you to use iBeacon technology, the Gimbal Series 20 beacon can be configured to broadcast iBeacon compatible BLE packets. To learn how to configure a beacon to be iBeacon compatible please read the Proximity Quickstart Guide. The Proximity framework makes it very easy to use both iBeacons and Gimbal beacons from the SDK and lets you manage them through the Gimbal Manager Portal.

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  • If you read their documentation, it is pretty clear that their SDK is relying on a custom BLE beacon that is not iBeacon compatible. See: gimbal.com/doc/proximity/ios.html Jan 24, 2014 at 22:50
  • Gimbal is a regular BLE transmitter, and can be re-configured to comply with iBeacon spec. See my response below.
    – Sergey
    Mar 26, 2014 at 16:15
  • Anyone know if this also works for the series 10? It claims it's in iBeacon mode but is still broadcasting different UUID's every half second.
    – LeslieOA
    May 28, 2014 at 18:21
  • iBeacon mode only works on Gimbal Series 20 beacons. See iBeacon section here: gimbal.com/doc/proximity/ios.html Strangely the Series 10 beacons accept iBeacon configuration and report in Beacon Manager app that they're iBeacons, but still broadcast as Gimbal Beacons.
    – alexkent
    Jun 6, 2014 at 22:50
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    I got a Series 10 with Firmware 1.8.0 to work as a standard iBeacon. It appears to be broadcasting in both modes now (Gimbal proximity for reconfigurability?) as well as the iBeacon settings I applied in the manager as per the answer given by Sergey.
    – owenfi
    Aug 7, 2014 at 20:30
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Interesting - I recently received a reply from Radius Networks that said ScanBeacon cannot identify Gimbal beacons - at least that's how I read it..

"Scanbeacon should display any device that is transmitting an ibeacon advertisement. We have had several reports that the little blue beacons that Qualcomm has been making available are not showing up with ScanBeacon. Our own investigation into these units is that they are not advertising the iBeacon identifiers.

There may be some configuration or other steps that need to be taken that we are not aware of. But the out-of-the-box state of the Qualcomm beacons appears to be no iBeacon advertisement."

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To use iOS, you will need to know the UUID. There are some other options that do not require knowledge of the UUID.

  1. If you have an Android device w/ 4.3 or later and support for BT4.0, you can use the free Locate application at the following link. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.radiusnetworks.locate

  2. If you have a Mac w 10.9 or higher and support for BT4.0, you can use the ScanBeacon app ($9.99) available on the Mac App Store or at this link. http://www.radiusnetworks.com/scanbeacon-app.html

Good luck, and make sure you report back your findings to rest of the community!

David

Full Disclosure: My colleagues just firmly reminded me that I'm misbehaving by not noting that I work for Radius Networks, who provides the tools listed above, and am the developer of the second tool listed, ScanBeacon.

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