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Lock & unlock your door using your iPhone, with Lockitron

We just moved into SOMAcentral, which is a hot startup space in SoMa for 40 startups, most with private offices.  The fine folks over there offered us a sweet way to lock & unlock our office door - a new YCombinator-funded startup called Lockitron (no info on their public website yet).

They have an alpha product that connects an iPhone app up to the door lock, allowing us to lock & unlock our office door from anywhere in the world.

It's pretty amazing and it's brand new; you won't find anything on the 'net about it yet, but it's real and we are using it!

Below is a video of Lockitron in action.  If you're interested in getting this set up for your home or office just contact me and I'll introduce you to one of the founders.

Packaging & Distribution in the Digital Age: Or, Why Even Grandma Loves Apps

There's long been a raging debate going over HTML vs. Native Apps.  Just Googling the debate returns over 3.7 million results.

I'm here to tell you, that's the wrong way of thinking of things.

It's like debating whether oil or water will win when mixed.  You can't get the right answer if you're asking the wrong question.  While oil and water don't mix well, they can co-exist in the same bottle, and there are valid times you might want to use each.

Let's dive into the right way to think about mobile, and specifically about the role native apps will play.  A better analogy of the mobile landscape is from the point of view of a car manufacturer like Honda.  Honda makes a lot of Honda Accords -- they're its bread & butter.  But for years, Honda had a Formula One team.  A Honda Accord will never compete at the Formula One level, nor was it meant to.  And conversely, if Honda only had a Formula One team, it wouldn't have the massive market share in the auto market that the Accord and other bread & butter models provide it, but Honda did learn a lot about how to make really great engines from its Formula One program.

In the same way, mobile apps are the "Formula One" of mobile, and HTML is the Honda Accord.  You can get wide distribution across many phones by having a mobile HTML presence, but you can't do the sexy, progressive types of things that you can do with apps, because an app is typically compiled software which can leverage the specific hardware functionality of the phone (the camera, the address book, geolocation, the microphone, and many other things).