![]() ![]() The big question, though, is how secure these locks really are. Perhaps more critically, someone who accesses your phone (and its smart-lock app) also has access to whatever is behind your door. Losing your smartphone could also mean getting locked out of your house. Use of low-energy Bluetooth helps manufacturers claim about a year of operating life using standard AA batteries if they die before you replace them, you’ll need a physical key to enter. Installing a smart lock requires batteries. iTouchless’ Bio-Matic model includes a fingerprint scanner. Smart locks are not without potential drawbacks, or at least wrinkles that don’t apply to pure-analog locks. The Nucli isn’t yet available, but you can preorder it on Indiegogo. Nucli includes an application programming interface “so developers can create new and exciting applications for the Nucli smart lock that will enhance your lock for years to come,” the company says. The iTouchless Bio-Matic Fingerprint Door, a $329 unit offered by a maker of touchless trash cans and soap dispensers, includes a fingerprint scanner and a keypad.Ĭan’t decide which feature set you need? With Westinghouse Security’s Nucli, you can get them all: fingerprint recognition, camera, voice control, and even voice mail. If voice, Bluetooth, and keypads don’t offer enough entry options, fingerprint recognition is another. Two other, competing wireless-device communication protocols, Zigbee and Z-Wave, provide the means to develop voice-controlled locks without requiring HomeKit. The August Smart Lock (starting at $199), designed to replace a traditional deadbolt, also supports Apple’s HomeKit. ![]() As a result, Siri can now unlock doors for you. The 96-year-old lock maker Schlage was first off the blocks with its Sense lock, integrating its technology with Apple’s HomeKit home automation platform in late 2015. Some newer smart locks support voice commands. Some smart-lock models, Kozak says, include an accelerometer-a sensing device enabling the lock to notify the homeowner whether a door had been simply slammed or knocked off its hinges. It ships with two physical keys, a fob, and two “eKeys” unique to a specific user’s phone adding more users requires purchasing additional eKeys. The Kevo lock-licensed by several manufacturers, including Kwikset and Weiser-by contrast, replaces an existing lock. Kwikset’s Kevo uses a unique eKey for each person who has access. On the less expensive end of the spectrum, Lockitron makes a lock starting at $99 that simply fits over an existing deadbolt lever. Most smart-lock systems can also be programmed to alert homeowners when someone enters (or tries to enter) the door.Ī few models demonstrate the range of costs and features currently available. Outliers aside, IHS Principal Analyst Blake Kozak says about two dozen companies now offer residential devices enabling users to lock or unlock doors remotely using a smartphone app or a low-energy Bluetooth connection. The worldwide market for these devices, which are designed to seamlessly connect with smartphone apps and communications protocols, will grow from $261 million in 2013 to $3.6 billion in 2019, research firm NextMarket Insights projects.Īs hackers and manufacturers test and improve their security, we thought we’d take a look at some of the best smart locks available and in development-as well as some of the challenges their makers are working to overcome to keep you safe. People today can install a variety of so-called smart locks on their doors to remotely unlock them-or give guests or workers keyless access to them-from 5 inches to 5,000 miles away. And like anything that survives thousands of years, they are evolving. They represent the most old-fashioned form of security around today. Locks and keys go back several thousand years-early examples were found in the ruins of ancient Babylon and Assyria.
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