Water is splashed smartphones at the 2014 International CES at the Las
Vegas Convention Center on January 8, 2014 in Las Vegas, Nevada. CES,
the world's largest annual consumer technology trade show, runs through
January 10 and is expected to feature 3,200 exhibitors showing off their
latest products and services to about 150,000 attendees. PHOTO/FILE
LAS VEGAS,
Gabriel Bestard-Ribas got tired of his house keys scratching his smartphone in his pocket, so he combined them.
The
result was a Goji lock, which senses when a resident's smartphone is
near and not only unlocks a door but greets the resident by name.
It's just one of the trend of "smart locks" on display at the Consumer Electronics Show that ends here Friday.
"My
keys were always scratching my phone, so I thought why not build them
in," said Bestard-Ribas, founder and chief executive of San Francisco
startup Goji.
His creation fuses mobile Internet
technology with centuries old lock mechanics. A free Goji application
installed in smartphones uses Bluetooth connectivity to let the lock
know a person is near and, if it is a resident or someone given a
"digital key," a personalized welcome message displays and the path is
opened.
A camera built into the lock takes a picture of
whoever is arriving. Images of visitors as well as alerts regarding
entry are relayed to residents' smartphones through home wireless
Internet connections.
SMART LOCKS
"It
is about allowing you to feel confidence and control over your home
access," Bestard-Ribas told AFP. "We have all lost keys or given them to
someone who left our sight; we don't know if copies were made."
Temporary
digital keys, restricting use to specified time periods, can be emailed
to house cleaners, dog walkers, or others who may need to visit homes.
The locks were available for order online at gojiaccess.com at a price
of $299 each, and will begin shipping in March.
Veteran lock makers Kwikset and Schlage were also showing off smart locks at CES.
A
Kwikset Kevo lock senses when a resident's smartphone is near and then
opens when the person touches what appears to be an ordinary deadbolt in
a door.
"As long as you have your phone in our pocket,
or in your purse, you touch the deadbolt and in about a second it will
lock or unlock," said Phil Dumas, president of UniKey, whose technology
was built into Kevo.
"It can even tell what side of the
door you are on, so you can be on the inside and a bad guy can touch
the door and it won't unlock."
Kevo launched late last
year at an array of US retailers with an application tailored for
iPhones, and UniKey was waiting for a software update from Google to
release one compatible with Android-powered handsets.
Schlage's
touch-screen deadbolt let people unlock doors to their homes remotely
using their smartphones, and featured built-in alarms that shriek if
incorrect codes are entered too many times.
Each of the
locks provided ways to offer limited access by granting people
temporary keys or codes, and promised records of who entered and when
delivered to smartphones.
"Your lock is linked to the
Wi-Fi of your home, and your home automation system, so you could manage
your home from anywhere in the world," Bestard-Ribas said. "This is a
really life-changing event that is happening now-a-days."
NIGHT VISION
For folks interested in seeing who is on their doorstep without having to change locks, there was SkyBell.
The
Internet Age doorbell connects to the same wires as its simpler
predecessors, but has a built in camera and synchs to Wi-Fi to stream
real-time video of who is ringing to a resident's smartphone.
It
also has motion sensing and night-vision, so it can transmit images
even when visitors arrive in darkness, according to SkyBell's Kelly
Stewart.
"You can see and hear and talk to them,"
Stewart said, of visitors both welcome and not. "If a robber is in front
of your house the motion-sensor will alert you, or if your daughter
tries to sneak in after her curfew."
SkyBell users have
the option of capturing screen shots of visitors. SkyBell, launched by
the California-based company at CES, is available in the United States
at online merchant Amazon.com for $199.
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