GPSlife BLOG

News about ISO GPS

News and technical articles about GPSlife and the ISO GPS system
Practical tip: Entering a reference coordinate system
29.11.2025

With the publication of the revised ISO 5459 in October 2024, which has also been available as DIN EN ISO 5459 since December 2025, it is now possible to enter a reference coordinate system in the drawing in addition to the new default for the association. From a functional point of view, references form the contacts in the assembly to the neighbouring components [...]

Practical tip: Systematically interpret drawings
22.10.2025

With a systematic approach that supports the reading and interpretation of technical drawings, understanding the content and identifying critical tolerances, for example for work preparation or metrology, becomes much easier.

New feature: Integrated glossary
29.09.2025

More efficient learning with the new integrated glossary. Precision is crucial in technical training - not only in terms of content, but also in terms of language. Particularly with complex topics, understanding often depends on

New course: Interpreting toleration
30.07.2025

Understanding the language of specifications. With the new e-learning course "Interpreting ISO GPS tolerancing", we are expanding our course portfolio and focussing on those who work with ISO GPS product specifications without creating them themselves.

GPSlife at the digitisation conference
19.05.2025

We are exhibiting at the INNEO Conference 2025. On 27 May 2025, the INNEO Conference on Digitalisation will take place in Stuttgart - an established industry event for digital product development, engineering, manufacturing and

Enterprise courses
22.04.2025

Enterprise solution: Our e-learning courses can now be fully integrated into your LMS. For companies that want to train their employees in a targeted and efficient manner, the deep integration of learning content into existing IT systems is essential.

Multilingual courses
07.04.2025

Foundation and basic course now also available in English! The use of standardised technical terminology is of central importance in the engineering environment - especially in design, production and quality assurance. A decisive success factor here is the use of consistent, standardised technical language.