Hubs — On-Site Receivers for Your Sensors

OGLAS hubs are on-site receivers that collect your sensor data, confirm it, log it, and hand it on to Local analysis or an optional Cloud copy. LoRa, mesh, and satellite hubs, with optional large or small displays.

A hub is the on-site collection point for an OGLAS install. It listens to every sensor in range, confirms the messages, logs the data, and hands it on — to Local analysis on the site, or an optional private Cloud copy off-site. There’s no cloud account in the middle and nothing has to leave the site unless you choose.

The right hub depends on how your sensors reach it and how far the data has to travel:

  • LoRa Hub — the workhorse. Long-range, low-power radio straight to the hub. The default for most sites.
  • Mesh Hub — sensors and repeaters relay for each other, so coverage stretches around hills, sheds, and dead spots without a single line-of-sight path back.
  • Satellite Hub — for sites with no other way out: the hub itself reaches the outside world over satellite.

And how you want to see it on site:

All of them share the same OGLAS firmware core — the difference is the transport they use and how much screen they have. Need a transport that isn’t listed, or a mix? That’s a custom build.


LoRa Hub

The workhorse OGLAS hub — long-range LoRa receiver, local logging, headless or paired with a display.

Mesh Hub

An OGLAS hub for mesh networks — sensors and repeaters relay for each other, so coverage reaches around hills, sheds, and dead spots without a single line-of-sight path.

Satellite Hub

An OGLAS hub for sites with no other way out — collects your sensor data locally and reaches the outside world over satellite.

Large display

Wall-mounted hub display with multiple pages of sensor data.

Small display

Compact OGLAS hub display for a desk or bench — in two sizes, Tiny and Medium, showing the handful of readings you glance at every day.