Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
TRIGGERcmd is a cloud service provided by VanderMey Consulting, LLC for securely running commands on a user’s computer remotely. The basic workflow is: install the Agent on a Windows, Mac, or Linux computer, configure triggers for local commands, and then execute them via TRIGGERcmd.com or supported integrations. The company emphasizes that it “only sends triggers to the cloud, not the commands themselves,” which helps with privacy and security to some extent.
Functionally, it is more of a bridge for “triggering local commands from the cloud” than a full operations platform. Examples include restarting Windows, running yum updates on Linux, opening Calculator on Mac, and extending to scenarios such as running scripts, installing updates, or opening a garage door. The platform supports Windows, Mac, and Linux, and offers Linux RPM, DEB, GUI-less DEB, plus Mac Apple Silicon/Intel Agents. Triggering options are relatively rich, with explicit support for IFTTT, Alexa, Google Home, ChatGPT, Zapier, and others, making it suitable for integration with smart home and low-code automation platforms. The main text only indirectly mentions published interfaces/APIs and does not provide specific API or SDK details.
The free plan costs $0 and supports 1 computer with unlimited commands on that computer, but is limited to 1 command per minute. It includes integrations such as Alexa, Google Home, IFTTT, and Zapier. The page mentions that a subscription unlocks more powerful capabilities, but the captured text does not provide subscription pricing. The terms of service state that subscription fees are non-refundable, and annual payments will not be refunded if you forget to cancel, so you should evaluate carefully before purchasing.
The advantages are a clear deployment path, cross-platform support, a friendly integration ecosystem, and a free plan that is enough for personal single-machine testing. Its design of not uploading the actual commands also reduces the exposure of sensitive commands. The downsides are its clear reliance on the cloud service, meaning network or service availability directly affects triggering; self-hosting capability is not disclosed, and its open-source status is unclear, with only some components described as using third-party open-source licenses. Pricing, API documentation, and enterprise support information are also insufficient.
It is suitable for individual developers, operations engineers, automation enthusiasts, and smart home users who want to remotely run scripts, restart devices, perform lightweight operations tasks, or connect with IFTTT/Zapier. The main text does not provide information about access from mainland China, so availability is unknown. At the same time, some integrations such as Google Home, Alexa, IFTTT, and Zapier may face usability challenges in China’s network and payment environment. If you prefer a more localized or self-hosted approach, consider Home Assistant, n8n, or a self-built remote execution setup based on SSH/VPN.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on triggercmd.com official site.
triggercmd.com is an United States Remote Desktop provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach triggercmd.com directly.