A real button for the things you do most.
MyKlicky is a compact connected button that lets you trigger useful actions instantly, from playing or pausing Sonos to refreshing a display or launching local automation on your own network.
Why a physical button still matters
Touchscreens are flexible, but repeated actions are different. For routines you trigger many times a day, a dedicated button is faster, clearer, and easier to share.
- Faster than opening an app
- No unlocking your phone
- No navigating menus
- Tactile and immediate feedback
- Works in shared spaces
Use cases
Real examples from current behavior and supported direction. MyKlicky is built as a practical shortcut, not a generic smart home gimmick.
Sonos control
Play or pause music with one press where the speaker is used.
Desk automation
Trigger a focused workflow from your desk without context switching.
Display refresh
Refresh a local timetable, dashboard, or status display on demand.
Smart home action
Launch a scene or routine from a shared location in your home.
Custom endpoint
Call your own local service or webhook for specialized triggers.
How it works
Practical setup in minutes. Keep it local, place it where it matters, press.
- Power on the device.
- Connect it to Wi-Fi.
- Assign actions to single, double, or long press.
- Place it where the routine happens.
- Press.
Principles
The product direction is intentionally narrow: fast, simple, and real-world.
Local-first
Core actions work on your network, close to where the routine lives.
Fast response
A physical press should feel immediate, predictable, and repeatable.
Simple setup
Configure quickly, then stop thinking about configuration.
Built for routines
Made for the actions you do every day, at home and on your desk.
Early stage, already working
MyKlicky is an early prototype that already runs real one-press actions and is being refined through practical use. We are looking for early users who want simple physical automation without extra friction.
Founder-built, iterative, and focused on useful behavior over marketing claims.