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Author: Kim Lyons
Photo by Ashley Carman / The Verge
If it works well, a new smart lock may prove there’s a real use for the long-range wireless charging tech the industry has been striving toward for years.
Wireless charging at a distance — not the inductive charging pad variety
Wi-Charge and Alfred Locks showed off the new Alfred ML2 lock at CES 2020. It’s a mortise-class design, that is, the kind found mostly in industrial and older buildings in the US, which are built into a long groove in the door, and one you can tap a phone or NFC card to open. More intriguingly, Wi-Charge says its technology can be used to beam power to the lock, letting it lock and unlock on cue without ever needing to replace the batteries inside. Wi-Charge says the tech can “safely and efficiently deliver...
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If it works well, a new smart lock may prove there’s a real use for the long-range wireless charging tech the industry has been striving toward for years.
Wireless charging at a distance — not the inductive charging pad variety
Wi-Charge and Alfred Locks showed off the new Alfred ML2 lock at CES 2020. It’s a mortise-class design, that is, the kind found mostly in industrial and older buildings in the US, which are built into a long groove in the door, and one you can tap a phone or NFC card to open. More intriguingly, Wi-Charge says its technology can be used to beam power to the lock, letting it lock and unlock on cue without ever needing to replace the batteries inside. Wi-Charge says the tech can “safely and efficiently deliver...
Continue reading…
Continue reading...