Control One = Control All
Object mode in one-to-many synchronization, send query of the node (or UI object) to all devices instead of coordination, click "OK" can run on all devices with different resolutions than click(100,100).
AAI Script (AAIS) is very small script built on top of AAI's FindNode, it has a very simple syntax and with a dozen of commands, it is useful to write simple tests or throw away scripts.
UI Explorer to obtain node information and helper program to construct query, great to learn query language learning.
Select Obj mode to easily sync Android devices with dfferent screen resolutions and brands (resolution independent).
Example: Sync buttons in different locations.
Support FindNode, REST API & JavaScript API
Integrate object-based action to existing API & seamless integration with FindNode.
device.sendAai({query:"T:Android version&&OY:1", action: "getText"})
devices.sendAai({ actions:["scrollIntoView('T:Pointer location||OX:1','down')","click"]})
http://localhost:8090/TotalControl/v2/devices/ids/aai/sendaai?
{
"token": "270eq7lXQK8bXYsJ",
"state": "active",
"ids": ["device@795844152","device@795812215"],
"query":"T:Pointer location||OX:1",
"postAction":"click",
"preAction":"scrollToView"
}
Total Control allows users to control Android devices from a PC with low latency and high stability. It supports controlling multiple Android devices simultaneously, making it ideal for Android testing, automation, demonstrations, and device farm environments.
Controlling Android devices from a PC is essential for developers, testers, and businesses that need to operate multiple devices efficiently. With Total Control, users can mirror and control Android devices directly from a Windows computer using a keyboard and mouse.
The software supports multi-device synchronization, allowing users to control multiple Android devices simultaneously from a single PC. This makes it ideal for Android automation, device testing, demonstrations, and large-scale device environments such as Android device farms.
Compared with traditional screen mirroring tools, Total Control focuses on low latency, stability, and large-scale device control. Users can easily deploy dozens of devices, synchronize actions, and automate repetitive operations using scripts and APIs.
The climax is quiet but seismic. Mara reaches the seam: a derelict clock tower where time itself was first stitched. Inside, she discovers a small room full of transcripts—moments frozen and pruned, catalogued like specimens. A single figure tends the archive, neither wholly human nor wholly machine, more curator than god. This being explains in fragments—lessons, regrets, and constraints. The freezes were never about control alone but about safeguarding a fragile narrative web. Some threads must be trimmed to prevent catastrophes; others are grafted to heal wounds. The patches reflect judgment calls made out of limited sight.
The patched world is, in the end, not a victory lap but an ongoing experiment in collective authorship. Mara’s curiosity transformed into stewardship, and the city learned that repair is never neutral. Patches can hide pain or prevent harm; they can save and erase with the same stitch. The narrative offers no sermon, only a mirror: whenever we have the power to stop, edit, or conceal, we must choose not only what to save, but who gets to decide. time freeze stop and teaser adventure patched
Curiosity propels Mara into the role of detective and reluctant adventurer. The first teaser arrives as a folded slip of paper tucked behind the patched neon—an invitation written in a looping hand: “Find the seam. Fix the story.” The note is both command and promise; it suggests the pause was deliberate, the patches intentional. The city, once a continuous narrative, is now an anthology of abrupt endings and tentative continuations, and Mara’s job becomes to read and mend. The climax is quiet but seismic
Mara’s choice is emblematic of the story’s moral knot. She can shut down the freezing mechanism, restoring time’s relentless, often cruel continuity—but letting certain tragedies recur. Or she can leave the seam intact, accepting that edits will continue, and that benevolence, error, and manipulation will coexist. Her final act is not an unequivocal triumph but a measured compromise: she reprograms the mechanism to announce its interventions with a small, public clue—an audible chime, a subtle shift in the skyline—so communities can see their histories being altered and participate in the debate. The patches remain, but the secrecy ends. A single figure tends the archive, neither wholly
The protagonist, Mara, learns how small malfunctions become invitations. She is a restorer of broken things by trade—old radios, cracked porcelain, and the occasional stubborn watch—but the time freeze is a riddle that defies gears and springs. When her city skips like a scratched record, she notices a pattern: every freeze leaves a tiny patch somewhere—a neon sign that won’t flicker again, a sidewalk tile bearing a fresh chisel mark, a child’s drawing rearranged into a different scene. These are not random glitches but breadcrumbs, stitched into reality by whoever or whatever paused the world.
Time stopped for three heartbeats before the world lurched back into motion—patched, smudged, and oddly familiar. That sudden halt was not the kind of interruption that lets you catch your breath; it was a seam ripped through the fabric of ordinary life, exposing the raw thread of possibility beneath. In that seam, the ordinary rules felt negotiable: clocks stuttered, reflections hesitated, and a single stray thought—what if—gained weight enough to change the neighborhood.
Controlling Android from a PC is simple with Total Control.
After installing the software on your computer, connect your Android device via USB and enable USB debugging.
Once connected, you can view and control your Android screen directly from your PC using a keyboard and mouse.
The Lite version supports 1–2 devices and is free for non-commercial use.
To control multiple Android devices simultaneously, upgrade to the Professional version for advanced features and large-scale device management.
Total Control supports Windows 7 to Windows 11 (32-bit and 64-bit).
It is compatible with Android 6.x to Android 16 devices from all major brands and manufacturers.
Yes. Total Control allows you to control Android devices from a PC without rooting the device. Simply enable USB debugging and connect via USB to start controlling the device securely.
Yes. The Professional version supports controlling multiple Android devices simultaneously, making it ideal for developers, testers, and enterprise device management.
The best way is to use a professional Android control tool that provides low latency, stable connections, and full keyboard and mouse support. Total Control is designed for commercial and multi-device environments.
Yes. When using a secure local USB connection, data transmission remains stable and protected. Total Control is built for enterprise-level reliability and security.