Release Notes

ExtremeLocation Customer Release Notes
05/01/2018 P/N: 9035521 Subject to Change Without Notice Page: 9 of 10
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Features in v 1.0
Location Analytics:
Location analytics are important component of ExtremeLocation. These analytics are based on presence or
location data for the clients in the environment. Some of the analytics are:
Total, new, and repeat visitors
Peak & Off-Peak Hours
Passers-by, engaged and bounce visitors
Top-5 venues based on total visitors or engagement time
Bottom-5 venues based on total visitors or engagement time
Total Visits and engagement per zone
Unique visitors in each zone
Top-5 and Bottom-5 zones by visits
Device density and engagement heat-maps
Top-5 and bottom-5 zones by engagement time
Associate visits and associate engagement time per zone
Associate to customer ratio for every zone
Location API:
ExtremeLocation supports an Application Programming Interface(API) for pushing location data and related
events in real-time to a 3rd party subscriber that consumes location data. A location subscriber profile is used
to setup and configure the subscriber in ExtremeLocation, so that it can establish the connection with the
subscriber and push location information in real-time.
ExtremeLocation uses standard JSON format to send location data. The API has four available streams:
Presence Eventssends events triggered based on device presence
Region Eventssends events triggered based on device location
Location Datasends location coordinates for located devices
Map ViewMapView is based on OpenStreet maps. MapView plots all the sites on the map where they are
physically located so that administrator can quickly navigate to the floor plan or analytics for the desired site. In
addition, MapView provides instant visibility on how today’s footfall is trending in any site compared to that of
yesterday. All the sites are color coded as green or red based on whether there is an uptick or downtick in the
footfall compared to yesterday.
Device ClassificationExtremeLocation supports classification of Wi-Fi devices into visitors, associates and
assets. By default, all Wi-Fi devices that are detected by the system are classified as visitor devices. But a
device can be classified as Associate or Asset by the system automatically based on the user defined rules.
These rules can be based on SSID to which the device is connected or based on the dwell time. For example,
any device connected to an SSID called “Associate_Networks” can be classified as “Associate”. Likewise, if a
device is seen over 15 hours in a day can be considered as “Asset”. The SSID and Dwell time can be
configurable for Associate and Asset groups separately