Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Commander One is a dual-pane file manager for macOS from Electronic Team, Inc., positioned as something like Total Commander for Mac. It brings local files, archives, remote servers, cloud storage, and mobile device file management together in a single desktop app. The system requirement is macOS 10.13 or later, with support for both Apple silicon and Intel Macs.
For basic file management, it offers a dual-pane interface, unlimited tabs, multiple view modes, multi-select, operation queues, quick preview, and advanced search. Search can cover local disks, cloud storage, devices, and archives, with support for regular expressions and case sensitivity. Its archive handling is also fairly complete: it can compress and extract files, and browse ZIP, RAR, 7Z, TAR, and other formats like ordinary folders. It can even edit files without unpacking the archive first.
Commander One’s main strength is connectivity. The page explicitly lists support for FTP/SFTP/FTPS/FTPES, WebDAV, Amazon S3, Google Drive, Dropbox, OneDrive, Backblaze B2, OpenStack, Box, MEGA, pCloud, and other services. It also supports multi-account management, transfers between cloud services, directly opening and editing cloud files, and sharing Dropbox/Google Drive/OneDrive/Amazon S3 links. On security, it supports encryption for online connections and stores passwords encrypted via macOS Keychain.
The PRO Pack uses a one-time license model: $29.99 for an individual license for 1 Mac, $99.99 for a team license for 5 Macs, while company licensing requires contacting sales. The page shows an overall rating of 4.4 based on 1103 user reviews, and provides [email protected] plus a Help center. The main text does not mention API/SDK availability, a plugin mechanism, open-source information, or a self-hosted version.
Its advantages are efficient dual-pane workflows and broad coverage of cloud drives and remote protocols. It is well suited to developers, operations teams, design/content teams, and Mac users who need to manage files across multiple clouds. Its drawbacks are that it is only clearly aimed at macOS, enterprise pricing is not fully transparent, and there is no clear explanation of developer extensibility. If your main need is command-line automation or an open-source auditable tool, it may not be the first choice.
The accessibility of the official website itself cannot be confirmed from the text alone. However, some of its integrated services, such as Google Drive, Dropbox, and OneDrive, may face network restrictions in mainland China. Amazon S3, FTP/SFTP, WebDAV, and similar connections depend on the location of the target service. Overall, it should be considered “partially restricted.” Alternatives to consider include ForkLift, Path Finder, Cyberduck, Mountain Duck, CloudMounter, or Total Commander.
⚠ 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 commander-one.com official site.
commander-one.com is an Ukraine Dev Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 8.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach commander-one.com directly.