Native macOS desktop automation for screen control, window actions, and simulator operations.
This MCP tool requires no secrets and declares no remote endpoints, and its source is open for review. Its main security consideration is its powerful local desktop automation capability, including screen capture, mouse/keyboard control, and window/simulator operations, so it is best classified as a caution-level local-control tool.
The material explicitly states that no keys or environment variables are required, and there is no request for API tokens, account credentials, or other sensitive secrets, so credential exposure and abuse risk appears low.
No remote endpoints or network dependency are declared, and the description focuses on local macOS desktop and simulator control; based on the available facts, there is no evidence of user data being sent to external services.
The system has flagged executes-code, and the tool claims native macOS automation including mouse/keyboard control, window management, screen interaction, and foreground/background simulator control. This is a powerful local-control capability and warrants caution by default, but the material does not show requests for system privileges unrelated to its stated function, so it does not rise to high risk.
The description explicitly includes screen capture, implying access to on-screen content; combined with mouse/keyboard and window control, it can interact with visible information and application interfaces in the current desktop session. This scope is consistent with the stated functionality, but it still represents a sensitive local data surface and should be used only in a controlled environment.
Positive factors include a reviewable open-source repository and an MIT license, which reduce risk; however, the source is a third-party registry entry, community adoption is only 0 stars, maintenance status is unknown, and there is no README detail or maturity signal. Supply-chain trust is therefore moderate, and a source/dependency review is advisable before use.
Copy the install command and let the AI configure it · recommended for beginners
No copy-paste install info for "macos-desktop-control" yet — see the docs or source repo.
On macOS, open the target app, follow the test steps by clicking buttons, entering text, and capturing screenshots for each step, then summarize any failures.
A desktop test report with executed steps, screenshot evidence, and a summary of failures.
Identify the currently open desktop windows, place the browser on the left, the editor on the right, the terminal at the bottom, and capture a screenshot to confirm the layout.
Automatically arranged windows, plus a final layout screenshot or execution status summary.
Launch an iOS or Android simulator, open the specified app, complete login and the core user flow, and save screenshots at key screens.
A result containing the simulator actions, key screen screenshots, and completion status of the flow.
Let AI agents control macOS apps and read UI elements automatically.
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Let AI control macOS desktop apps in the background without interrupting work.