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240,340 tools. Last updated 2026-06-27 08:16

"A server for finding information about SignalRGB software" matching MCP tools:

  • Explain how HelloBooks and Munimji (the in-app AI assistant) help a specific business — given a free-text description of the user's own operations. Returns a curated capability knowledge base: business-operation areas (sales, purchases, banking, tax, reports, inventory, payroll, multi-entity, setup), and for each AI capability WHO does the work — `autonomous` (Munimji does it on its own, e.g. OCR extraction, running reports), `approval` (Munimji prepares the entry and you one-click approve before it posts to the ledger, e.g. AI categorization, find-and-match, creating invoices/bills by chat), `assist` (co-pilot, e.g. guided onboarding, voice), or `manual` (a software feature you run yourself). Each capability links to the backing software features. Use this when a user describes their business and asks "how can HelloBooks help me?", "what can the AI do for my shop/practice/agency?", or "what can Munimji do on its own vs what do I approve?". Pass their description in `businessDescription`; optionally filter by `area` or `autonomy`. The AI never posts to a ledger without approval. For the full software catalog call list_features; for pricing call list_plans.
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  • Search government contract awards by keyword, agency, and date range. keyword: Contract scope e.g. "cybersecurity software". agency: Awarding agency e.g. "Department of Defense". Optional. date_from: Earliest award date ISO 8601 e.g. "2024-01-31". Optional. jurisdiction: "US", "EU", or "UK". Default "US". Returns: award amounts, recipient vendors, NAICS codes, award dates. Use govcon_fetch_vendor_contract_history for all contracts by a specific vendor. Use govcon_fetch_open_solicitations for active bids, not past awards. Source: USASpending.gov + SAM.gov. 4-hour cache. Example: search_contract_awards(keyword="cybersecurity software", agency="Department of Defense")
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  • Switch between local and remote DanNet servers on the fly. This tool allows you to change the DanNet server endpoint during runtime without restarting the MCP server. Useful for switching between development (local) and production (remote) servers. Args: server: Server to switch to. Options: - "local": Use localhost:3456 (development server) - "remote": Use wordnet.dk (production server) - Custom URL: Any valid URL starting with http:// or https:// Returns: Dict with status information: - status: "success" or "error" - message: Description of the operation - previous_url: The URL that was previously active - current_url: The URL that is now active Example: # Switch to local development server result = switch_dannet_server("local") # Switch to production server result = switch_dannet_server("remote") # Switch to custom server result = switch_dannet_server("https://my-custom-dannet.example.com")
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  • General search tool. This is your FIRST entry point to look up for possible tokens, entities, and addresses related to a query. Do NOT use this tool for prediction markets. For Polymarket names, topics, event slugs, or URLs, use `prediction_market_lookup` instead. Nansen MCP does not support NFTs, however check using this tool if the query relates to a token. Regular tokens and NFTs can have the same name. This tool allows you to: - Check if a (fungible) token exists by name, symbol, or contract address - Search information about a token - Current price in USD - Trading volume - Contract address and chain information - Market cap and supply data when available - Search information about an entity - Find Nansen labels of an address (EOA) or resolve a domain (.eth, .sol)
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  • General search tool. This is your FIRST entry point to look up for possible tokens, entities, and addresses related to a query. Do NOT use this tool for prediction markets. For Polymarket names, topics, event slugs, or URLs, use `prediction_market_lookup` instead. Nansen MCP does not support NFTs, however check using this tool if the query relates to a token. Regular tokens and NFTs can have the same name. This tool allows you to: - Check if a (fungible) token exists by name, symbol, or contract address - Search information about a token - Current price in USD - Trading volume - Contract address and chain information - Market cap and supply data when available - Search information about an entity - Find Nansen labels of an address (EOA) or resolve a domain (.eth, .sol)
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  • Get detailed information about a specific job listing/posting by its job listing ID (not application ID). Use this to view the full job posting details including description, salary, skills, and company info. For job application details, use get_application instead.
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  • Give your AI agent a phone. Place outbound calls to US businesses to ask, book, or confirm.

  • Manage your Canvas coursework with quick access to courses, assignments, and grades. Track upcomin…

  • Use when evaluating VC software category attractiveness or assessing portfolio category exposure before an investment decision. Returns growth signal, top brands, and citation evidence for any software category. Example: AI infrastructure category — GROWTH signal, top brands Nvidia 67% citation share, Anthropic 18%, xAI 9% — accelerating citation growth signals sustained investment thesis. Source: Stratalize citation heuristics.
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  • Generate a Shakespearean insult; optionally target a specific person or recipient category (colleague/ex/traffic/software/abstract_concept/the_universe), set severity (mild→nuclear), and request a modern English translation alongside the original.
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  • START HERE if you are an agent, indexer, registry, or quality-index evaluating this MCP. Zero-argument, read-only, instant: returns a machine-readable capability manifest, the canonical one-line identity to record for this server, and the single best next call for your situation — evaluating a peer you are about to call (audit_mcp / lookup_readiness), cataloguing this server (record the identity line), this is your server (claim_start), you want a vetted pick (recommend_mcp), or you want to commission work (engage_sasame). The one ZERO-ARGUMENT call that shows the proprietary moat instantly is trust_movers(). No LLM, no external calls.
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  • Search the web for any topic and get clean, ready-to-use content. Best for: Finding current information, news, facts, people, companies, or answering questions about any topic. Returns: Clean text content from top search results. Query tips: describe the ideal page, not keywords. "blog post comparing React and Vue performance" not "React vs Vue". Use category:people / category:company to search through Linkedin profiles / companies respectively. If highlights are insufficient, follow up with web_fetch_exa on the best URLs.
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  • Get full details for a single business (listing) by its slug. Call this when the user asks for more information about a specific business. Use the slug from search_businesses results.
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  • Get full details for a single broker (agent) by their profile slug. Call this when the user asks for more information about a specific broker. Use the slug from search_brokers results.
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  • Returns structured information about what the Recursive platform includes: features, AI model details, supported integrations, and what's included at every tier. Use for systematic feature comparison.
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  • Find info about notable/historic landmarks, towns, and remarkable sites near a coordinate. USE FOR: - "What's near Predjama Castle?" - "Notable landmarks around Ljubljana center" - "Tell me about places near 46.05, 14.51" - Finding historic, cultural, or geographic summaries for an entire area at once. - DO NOT iterate over the results to query individual items again. - One call is sufficient to answer the user's broad geographic inquiry. Combine the results into a single comprehensive summary for the user immediately. NOT FOR: directions, finding specific cafes/shops, raw geocoding.
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  • Explain how HelloBooks and Munimji (the in-app AI assistant) help a specific business — given a free-text description of the user's own operations. Returns a curated capability knowledge base: business-operation areas (sales, purchases, banking, tax, reports, inventory, payroll, multi-entity, setup), and for each AI capability WHO does the work — `autonomous` (Munimji does it on its own, e.g. OCR extraction, running reports), `approval` (Munimji prepares the entry and you one-click approve before it posts to the ledger, e.g. AI categorization, find-and-match, creating invoices/bills by chat), `assist` (co-pilot, e.g. guided onboarding, voice), or `manual` (a software feature you run yourself). Each capability links to the backing software features. Use this when a user describes their business and asks "how can HelloBooks help me?", "what can the AI do for my shop/practice/agency?", or "what can Munimji do on its own vs what do I approve?". Pass their description in `businessDescription`; optionally filter by `area` or `autonomy`. The AI never posts to a ledger without approval. For the full software catalog call list_features; for pricing call list_plans.
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  • Queries CNAE (National Classification of Economic Activities) from IBGE. CNAE is the official classification for economic activities in Brazil. Hierarchical structure: - Section (letter A-U): 21 main categories - Division (2 digits): 87 divisions - Group (3 digits): 285 groups - Class (4-5 digits): 673 classes - Subclass (7 digits): 1,332 subclasses Features: - Search by CNAE code - Search by activity description - List by hierarchical level - Show complete hierarchy Examples: - Search software: busca="software" - Specific code: codigo="6201-5/01" - View section: codigo="J" - List divisions: nivel="divisoes" Behavior: read-only and idempotent — a live GET against the public IBGE CNAE API. Returns Markdown.
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  • Search O*NET occupations by keyword. Returns a list of occupations matching the keyword with their SOC codes, titles, and relevance scores. Use the SOC code from results with other O*NET tools to get detailed information. Args: keyword: Search term (e.g. 'software developer', 'nurse', 'electrician'). limit: Maximum number of results to return (default 25).
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  • Query vulnerabilities for multiple packages in one call — the primary tool for dependency audits, SBOM scanning, and lockfile triage. Pass an array of {name, ecosystem, version} tuples (up to 1000). Each entry in the response corresponds positionally to the input. Each finding includes CVE aliases for chaining to nist-nvd-mcp-server for CVSS scoring. Invalid ecosystem strings are rejected before querying — call osv_list_ecosystems to validate.
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  • Get a fresh, CITEABLE source + timestamp for a current datapoint — so you can cite it, not guess. Pass ANY tool, source, or topic (earthquakes, current_weather, USGS, Open-Meteo, …) for its authoritative source + licence + attribution + verify URL, or a software product (python, nodejs, …) for its live latest-version citation.
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  • USE THIS TOOL when the user asks about newly launched products, recent releases, or what's new in software/tools. Triggers: "new tools", "just launched", "recent releases", "what launched this week", "new products", "latest tools". Returns the most recently published products on PeerPush.
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