This KeyMe Locksmiths kiosk in Point Loma sits on the Sunset Cliffs–side Rosecrans corridor, part of a 7,500-unit national network founded in 2012 that uses computer-vision scanning to duplicate residential, commercial, and select automotive keys on the spot. The kiosk's machine-learning algorithm reads worn teeth and restores them to factory-spec geometry, a calibration step that separates it from the hands-on bitting work that traditional locksmiths like Auto Key SD perform for transponder programming and high-security rekeying. Supported key types include standard pin-tumbler house keys, Schlage and Kwikset residential blanks, padlock keys, and compatible RFID access fobs. Restricted keyways, patented blanks, and keys stamped "Do Not Duplicate" are blocked at the scanner before the cutting cycle starts. Homeowners replacing deadbolts or knob sets can match new locksets from the hardware inventory at Dixieline Lumber and Home Centers to keys cut at this kiosk in a single errand run. The most advanced capability is automotive key duplication, covering more than 38,000 make-model-year combinations for both blade-cut and push-button-start fobs.