Not any more, quite a few electronic lock companies made fingerprint doorlocks 
years ago, I had one and so did a friend of mine, and they were the biggest 
pain in the neck.
Depending on how much you want to spend, you are much better off with an 
electronic lock with a keypad or a smartlock which you can unlock with your 
phone.
I have a Weiser electronic lock at my retail store which was actually installed 
by my alarm company and which has a keypad, but it also connects via the 
Zigbbee protocol to my alarm panel so I can unlock it via the alarm app 
remotely.
At home we just recently purchased a Schlage Sense smartlock which has home kit 
support. This means you can unlock it by telling SIRI “Unlock my front door” or 
from the home app. It has also a keypad, but it’s a touchscreen so you’d have 
to put at least a dot on the 5 or maybe put a tactile dot on the 1, 3, 5, 7 and 
9 to be able to use it manually.
Before we bought it we had a Schlage electronic lock on the front door and I 
really like it, too. It has a lock button at the top and underneat two rows of 
buttons, 1 to 5 and 6 to 0. The lock button is above the 3, so in the middle 
above the two number rows. This particular lock (forgot the model) doesn’t 
actually have a motor so the single 9 Volt battery lasts forever because all it 
does is to engage a deadbolt which you turn by hand to lock and unlock the 
door. Less high tech, but also completely reliable and we now moved this lock 
to our patio door.
If there are still fingerprint locks around I really advise you to stay away 
from them, if you don’t want to spend too much then you can get a lock like 
that electronic Schlage with the keypad I described for around $100 and it’s 
super-easy to use, you can program multiple codes and it’s easy  to program it 
without sight, all you need to know is the master/programming code which you 
can customize and then you of course need to write down the basic commands for 
adding or removing a code. It's usually something like enter the master code 
and press the lock button, then press 1 to add a code followed by the lock 
button, then enter a 4-digit code, press the lock button and re-enter it. This 
is just an example, but it’s that type of sequence.
I am not sure if this particular Schlage can do one-time codes, but before we 
got the smartlock at my store we had a electronic keypad lock from Tamor. That 
one you could set a mastercode anywhere from 4 to 8 digits long and user codes 
then had to be the same length which means if you think a 4-digit code might be 
too insecure this one is nice because you can do a 5 or 7 digit code which is 
more unusual. Anyhow, that one also allowed for one-time codes so if, for 
example, you wanted to give a plumber or electrician or a friend access to your 
house without giving them a permanent code, you could set up a one-time code 
and once it got used once it would no longer work. Of course with a smartlock 
this functionality is even further expanded, you can give your dog walker who 
picks up your dog every weekday between 8 and 8:30 AM a code which only works 
during that time or you could simply ask them to call you when they are at the 
door and you can then unlock the door remotely.

Best regards,
Sieghard

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Cris Ali
Sent: Friday, January 12, 2018 8:50 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Door locks with fingerprint technology with Bluetooth and accessible 
app?

Hello Folks,
Since I have the tendency to lock myself out from time to time, I thought I 
should explore the possibility of getting a door lock that works on 
fingerprint.  But It must have a Bluetooth connection to the phone so that I 
can do the settings, or change them when I want to, provided that the App is 
accessible with voiceover..
Are you guys aware of any such product?

Cheers,

Cris


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