Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
TRIGGERcmd is a cloud-based remote command triggering service. Users first install an Agent on a Windows, Mac, or Linux computer, then configure local commands, with each command mapped to a trigger. Commands can then be triggered by logging in to TRIGGERcmd.com or via third-party automation platforms. The page specifically notes that “only the trigger is sent to the cloud, not the command itself,” which may help with perceived privacy and security.
Its main use case is remotely executing local scripts or system commands, such as installing updates, running scripts, or controlling a garage door. Compared with plain SSH, it is more focused on event-based triggering and low-barrier automation, making it suitable for connecting computer commands to smart home setups or workflows. The listed trigger methods include IFTTT, Alexa, Google Home, ChatGPT, Zapier, SmartThings, and more, so the ecosystem coverage is fairly broad. Supported platforms are clearly stated as Windows, Mac, and Linux, but no specific programming languages, frameworks, APIs, or SDKs are mentioned.
The free plan costs $0 and supports 1 computer with unlimited commands on that computer, but is limited to 1 command per minute. The subscription plan costs $22.95/year and supports unlimited computers, unlimited commands, and no rate limits. For a remote automation tool, the annual fee is relatively low, especially for users with multiple personal devices or lightweight server scenarios. Payment methods are not disclosed in the main content.
The strengths are cross-platform support, a wide range of trigger methods, a free plan that is genuinely usable, and a subscription plan with few restrictions and clear pricing. The downsides are that the service clearly depends on cloud login and cloud-based triggering, with no self-hosting option visible in the reviewed content. It also lacks details on permission management, auditing, encryption specifics, team collaboration, and API/SDK support. The page includes links to Documentation and Trigger Methods, but the captured content is not enough to assess the depth of the documentation.
TRIGGERcmd is suitable for developers, sysadmins, makers, and smart home enthusiasts who want to connect local scripts to voice assistants or automation platforms. For enterprise production environments with compliance, auditing, or high-availability requirements, its security and support capabilities should be verified further. Access from China cannot be determined from the available content. However, because it relies in part on overseas ecosystems such as Alexa, Google Home, IFTTT, and Zapier, usage in mainland China may be affected by network conditions and account availability. Possible alternatives include Home Assistant, n8n, IFTTT, Zapier, SSH/Ansible, and similar tools.
⚠ 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 hisplacegr.org official site.
hisplacegr.org is an United States Remote Desktop provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach hisplacegr.org directly.