KeyMe Locksmiths in downtown San Diego stations a self-service key-duplication kiosk inside the Ralphs at 101 G Street, where multi-camera scanning cuts standard residential keys in under three minutes. Keys flagged as restricted or high-security during the scan process require the manual code-cutting and lock-manipulation work performed by Expo Locksmith San Diego on nearby Front Street. The kiosk accepts RFID access fobs used in many downtown condo and apartment buildings, cloning compatible cards so tenants can keep a backup without requesting one from property management. Each duplicate is cut from a fresh blank using automated tooling calibrated by neural-network analysis, eliminating the copy-of-a-copy degradation common with traditional mechanical tracing. Automotive key duplication covers thousands of make-model-year combinations, though ignition or immobilizer faults that go beyond the blank itself require the OBD-II diagnostic work that Griffin's Auto Repair handles from its downtown garage. The highest-value kiosk function involves scanning a worn laser-cut automotive key, digitally restoring its side-milled grooves to factory geometry, and storing the encrypted blueprint in the cloud for no-original reorders at any of the 8,000-plus KeyMe terminals nationwide.