Link Labs has integrated Hubble Network connectivity into its AirFinder asset-tracking platform, allowing the company’s Bluetooth LE tags to report location and sensor data when assets move outside Link Labs-enabled sites. The move targets a long-standing visibility gap in logistics, construction and field operations where tracked items regularly leave managed premises.
Enterprise asset tracking tends to break at a familiar boundary: the moment equipment, pallets, or returnable transport items leave a site where the operator controls the infrastructure. Inside warehouses and yards, Bluetooth Low Energy (BLE), RFID, Wi-Fi and private networks can deliver dense coverage. Outside, teams often fall back to periodic scans, manual check-ins, or costlier GPS/cellular trackers—each with its own compromises around device cost, battery life, and service complexity.
Link Labs is attempting to smooth that transition by extending how its BLE tags are detected when assets move beyond a Link Labs-enabled facility. The company says it has partnered with Hubble Network so that Link Labs tags can continue reporting location and sensor data “in transit, between sites, and in the field,” with data feeding directly into Link Labs’ AirFinder platform for a single view of on-site and off-site assets.
The announcement matters less as a generic “global coverage” claim and more because of the architectural choice: Link Labs is not positioning this as a new tag category or a separate satellite/GNSS tracker line. Instead, it is extending the reach of existing BLE tags by relying on Hubble’s gateway network to detect them outside Link Labs’ own infrastructure footprint. In practical terms, Link Labs is treating off-site visibility as a network problem rather than a device redesign problem.
From local hubs to a broader detection fabric
Within the AirFinder system, Link Labs’ SuperTag acts as a local hub that detects nearby BLE tags and reports their location and sensor data back to the AirFinder platform. The partnership adds another detection path: Hubble’s terrestrial gateways can detect the same tags when they are no longer near Link Labs-enabled onsite locations or the SuperTag Hub, and that data is then integrated into the same AirFinder view.
Hubble describes its footprint as “more than 90 million terrestrial gateways” and says satellite connectivity is expanding coverage to remote and off-grid environments. Link Labs, for its part, frames the combined solution for construction, logistics, field services, and multi-site enterprises—use cases where assets routinely transition between controlled sites and uncontrolled environments.
Why this is distinct from typical asset-tracking expansions
Many asset-tracking vendors address the “beyond the facility” problem by adding cellular to the tag, enabling GPS, or offering a multi-radio device portfolio that shifts connectivity modes depending on location. Link Labs is taking a different route: it is keeping the tag BLE-based while extending detection through a third-party gateway layer. The company explicitly highlights the cost implications of avoiding GPS or cellular hardware in the tag, and avoiding SIM cards and data plans.
That distinction is important for buyers because it changes the operational model. BLE tags are often deployed at scale because they are simple and relatively inexpensive compared with cellular trackers. Extending off-site visibility without changing tags suggests a lower-friction pathway for existing AirFinder deployments to broaden their tracking envelope—without the procurement, certification, and lifecycle considerations that typically follow a move to cellular hardware.
What IoT professionals should watch in deployment
There is also an implied trade-off. Extending BLE detection via a gateway network can improve continuity, but it shifts expectations: “coverage” becomes a function of gateway density along routes and at handoff points, rather than a direct device-to-network link as in cellular IoT. For system integrators and enterprise architects, that means validating where assets actually travel, what “in-transit” visibility looks like in practice, and how frequently detections occur in the environments that matter (yards, ports, loading bays, customer locations, or remote job sites).
Another practical implication is data integration simplicity. Link Labs says Hubble-collected asset data feeds directly into AirFinder, positioning AirFinder as the single pane of glass. For enterprises already standardizing on AirFinder for onsite tracking, consolidating off-site signals into the same platform can reduce workflow fragmentation—particularly for exception management, condition monitoring, and chain-of-custody processes that suffer when visibility is split across systems.
Ecosystem relevance: BLE is pushing beyond indoor-only assumptions
At an industry level, the announcement reflects a broader shift: BLE is increasingly being asked to do more than indoor proximity and facility-level location. As more gateway layers emerge—whether crowdsourced, partner-operated, or tied to satellite backhaul—the boundary between “indoor BLE” and “wide-area tracking” becomes less rigid. For connectivity providers, that is a reminder that not every asset-tracking expansion automatically translates into additional cellular IoT connections; some enterprises will pursue continuity by extending non-cellular radios through alternative detection networks.
Link Labs says extended connectivity through Hubble’s network is available to Link Labs customers today. For OEMs building asset tags and for enterprises deploying them at volume, the key takeaway is the option to expand visibility without migrating to a different class of tracker—while still accepting that performance will be defined by where gateway detection is available and how that maps to specific operational lanes.
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