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305,717 tools. Last updated 2026-07-16 16:39

"A tool or platform for generating videos" matching MCP tools:

  • Get transcripts for a YouTube channel's most recent videos (newest first) as timestamped markdown, one section per video. Use for research across a creator's recent output; for one known video use get_transcript. Read-only; requires an API key. Charges 1 credit per video that returns a transcript, including repeat calls; videos without captions are skipped free. A 10-video call typically costs up to 10 credits, so start with a small limit. Rate limit: 5 requests per 10 seconds.
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  • Fetch the full record for a single creator by ID or exact platform username. Use this when you already have either: - a canonical creator UUID returned by `search_creators`, `semantic_search_creators`, `autocomplete_creators`, or `find_lookalike_creators`; or - an exact platform+username pair such as platform "instagram" and username "niickjackson". Pass `include: ['profiles']` to also receive the creator's social profile summaries when using a creator UUID. For platform+username inputs, this tool resolves through the profile endpoint and returns the profile record plus the underlying creator record, so you already get the matched profile context. Examples: - User: "Get creator 123e4567-e89b-12d3-a456-426614174000" -> call with id. - User: "Get @niickjackson on Instagram" -> call with platform "instagram" and username "niickjackson", or use `get_profile` if profile metrics are the main need. - User: "Tell me about @niickjackson and include his profiles" -> use platform "instagram" and username "niickjackson"; then use `get_profile`/`get_posts` for platform-specific metrics and content if needed. Use `lookup_profiles` for batch exact profile lookups.
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  • Start generating an AML risk report ASYNCHRONOUSLY for a Norwegian company. Returns immediately with a report_id and status 'pending' — the report is built in the background. Poll `get_aml_report` with the report_id until status is 'done' (then read score/level/factors) or 'failed'. Use this instead of `get_aml_score` for large/complex ownership structures that may otherwise time out, or to start many screenings in parallel. Generates an auditable report stored for 60 months per Hvitvaskingsloven §35.
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  • Get transcripts for the videos in a YouTube playlist (in playlist order) as timestamped markdown, one section per video. Use for working through a course, series, or curated list; for one known video use get_transcript. Read-only; requires an API key. Charges 1 credit per video that returns a transcript, including repeat calls; videos without captions are skipped free. A 10-video call typically costs up to 10 credits, so start with a small limit. Rate limit: 5 requests per 10 seconds.
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  • Get transcripts for the videos in a YouTube playlist (in playlist order) as timestamped markdown, one section per video. Use for working through a course, series, or curated list; for one known video use get_transcript. Read-only; requires an API key. Charges 1 credit per video that returns a transcript, including repeat calls; videos without captions are skipped free. A 10-video call typically costs up to 10 credits, so start with a small limit. Rate limit: 5 requests per 10 seconds.
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  • Fetch a single social profile by (platform, username). Always use this first when the user gives an exact handle on a specific platform (for example "@niickjackson on Instagram") and you need the full profile: bio, follower/engagement metrics, recent activity, growth, and the canonical creator ID. Pass exactly the username they typed without the @ sign — case-insensitive matching is handled server-side. Do not use `search_creators` for an exact platform+username lookup. Examples: - User: "Pull @niickjackson on Instagram" -> use this tool with platform "instagram" and username "niickjackson". - User: "Tell me about instagram.com/niickjackson" -> parse the platform and username, then use this tool. - User: "Is @niickjackson a fit for Pixel?" -> use this tool first, then call `get_posts` and/or `match_creators` if the task needs content or fit analysis. Returns the profile record plus the underlying creator record. If you already have a creator UUID, use `get_creator` instead. For batch lookups by handle, use `lookup_profiles`.
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Matching MCP Servers

  • A
    license
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    quality
    C
    maintenance
    Enables LLM clients to programmatically generate videos using Plainly's API by listing available video templates, retrieving template parameters, submitting render requests, and checking render status.
    Last updated
    20
    6
    MIT

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  • Search the AI Tool Directory catalog: tool details, status checks (alive/acquired/deceased + cause and date), alternatives, and side-by-side comparisons. Read-only.

  • Find a creator by name/handle, while preserving legacy semantic creator search. Use this as the default creator lookup tool when the user gives a creator-ish string but not a canonical creator UUID: a handle, partial handle, display name, creator name, or profile-ish text. This is cheap, fast, and backed by the creator lookup index. If the user gives an exact handle on a specific platform (for example "@niickjackson on Instagram"), prefer `get_profile` first because it returns the full platform profile. If you need to resolve a rough creator name or partial handle first, use this tool with `query_type: "creator_lookup"`. For backward compatibility, this tool still accepts the old semantic-search fields (`platforms`, follower/engagement filters, `creator_kinds`) and routes legacy calls to the semantic endpoint unless the query clearly contains a handle/profile URL. For new topical/niche discovery calls such as "fitness creators in NYC" or "vegan recipe creators with high engagement", prefer `semantic_search_creators` because its name is explicit and less likely to be confused with exact creator lookup. Examples: - User: "Find @cris" -> use this tool with query "cris" and query_type "creator_lookup". - User: "Who is that fitness coach called Jane?" -> use this tool with query "Jane" and query_type "creator_lookup". - User: "Pull @niickjackson on Instagram" -> use `get_profile` with platform "instagram" and username "niickjackson". - User: "Find news creators with 1M+ followers" -> use `semantic_search_creators`, not this tool. Returns either autocomplete-style creator lookup results or legacy semantic results, depending on routing. Use returned creator IDs with `get_creator`, `find_lookalike_creators`, or `match_creators`; use returned platform usernames with `get_profile` or `get_posts`.
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  • Use when a user wants to pull their saved DC Hub shortlist OUT of the platform for offline analysis, a spreadsheet, or ingestion into another tool (PRO). Example: "Export my saved sites as GeoJSON for QGIS." — export_dataset format=geojson. Params: format ("csv" default, or "geojson"). Returns: the full file contents as text — CSV rows or a GeoJSON FeatureCollection of your saved sites with DCPI score, target MW, market, coordinates, and notes. Do NOT use to list sites in-chat (use list_saved_sites) or to save a new one (use save_site); this is the bulk-download path.
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  • Wait for a platform agent task to complete and return its result. Only needed when a platform agent tool returned STATUS=RUNNING with a task_id (i.e. the task was still running after the initial 50s inline wait). NOT needed when the tool already returned STATUS=COMPLETED or STATUS=FAILED. NOT needed for a2a_call_agent — that always returns directly. Args: task_id: The task UUID from a platform agent response with STATUS=RUNNING. max_wait_seconds: Max seconds to wait (default 45, max 300).
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  • Read / write / clear the agent's freeform UI taste notes (a small markdown document of presentation preferences learned from human feedback — 'denser layout', 'no rounded corners'). ONE tool with an `action` enum: get | set | clear. Call `get` BEFORE generating a pane so prior feedback shapes the output; `set` does a whole-document replace (not append). Keep entries about UI/presentation only.
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  • List every Stimulsoft product/platform that has indexed documentation available through this MCP server. Returns a JSON array of { id, name, description } objects covering the full Stimulsoft Reports & Dashboards product line (Reports.NET, Reports.WPF, Reports.AVALONIA, Reports.WEB for ASP.NET, Reports.BLAZOR, Reports.ANGULAR, Reports.REACT, Reports.JS, Reports.PHP, Reports.JAVA, Reports.PYTHON, Server API, etc.). CALL THIS FIRST when the user's question is ambiguous about which Stimulsoft platform they are using, or when you need to pick a valid `platform` value to pass into `sti_search`. The returned platform `id` values are the exact strings accepted by the `platform` parameter of `sti_search`. This tool is cheap (no OpenAI call, no vector search) — call it freely whenever you are unsure about platform naming.
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  • Get a fast suitability score (0-100) for a US property without generating a full report. Call this when the user wants a quick go/no-go assessment or an initial screening before committing to a full analysis. Returns a single score with confidence level and one-sentence rationale. Consumes a partial (0.25) analysis credit from your AcreLens account.
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  • Ask a question about one or more videos with visual analysis. Most effective on focused time ranges — use start/end to specify the segment to analyze. BEFORE calling this tool, read the reka://docs/guide resource for recommended workflows. In most cases, you should first: - search_videos to find WHEN something happens, then pass those timestamps here as start/end - segment_video to detect and locate specific objects - get_transcript to read what was said For single-video questions, pass video_id with start/end. For cross-video questions, pass videos — a list of video references with start/end each. For follow-up questions, pass conversation_id from the previous response. You can add start/end to drill into a specific moment while keeping the conversation context. Requires qa_only or full pipeline.
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  • Return the kernelcad-authoring SKILL.md body — conventions for writing .kcad.ts scripts (imports, parameters, evaluation contract, common pitfalls). Use this tool BEFORE generating CAD code if your MCP client does not list resources. Clients that do list resources should instead read `kernelcad://skills/authoring` directly — the contents are identical. INPUT: none. OUTPUT: { uri, mimeType, text } where `text` is the SKILL.md body.
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  • Batch-fetch up to 100 profiles by (platform, username) pairs. Use this when the user has a list of handles and you need profile data for all of them at once (e.g., "give me follower counts for these 30 accounts I'm considering" or "which of @a @b @c are real accounts?"). One round-trip beats 30 calls to `get_profile`. Use this for exact batch handle lookup, not semantic discovery. For one exact platform+username pair, use `get_profile`. For partial or fuzzy handle/name input, use `search_creators` or `autocomplete_creators`. Use `semantic_search_creators` only for topical/niche/audience discovery where false-positive semantic matches are acceptable. Examples: - User: "Compare @a, @b, and @c on Instagram" -> use this tool for the exact handle batch. - User: "Give me follower counts for these 30 accounts" -> use this tool. - User: "Find wellness creators in Austin" -> use `semantic_search_creators`, not this tool. The response splits results into `data` (profiles found) and `not_found` (the (platform, username) pairs that weren't recognized). Profiles are returned in no particular order — re-correlate via the platform/username fields if you need to preserve input order.
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  • Semantic discovery search for influencers/content creators using natural-language queries. Use this only when the user asks to discover creators by topic, audience, geography, niche, content style, or campaign criteria (e.g., "fitness creators in NYC", "vegan recipe creators with high engagement", "tech reviewers who cover phones"). The query is matched against creator profiles, extracted facts, and visual style via hybrid vector search. Do not use this for exact handles, usernames, or known creator names. If the user gives a specific platform and handle (for example "@niickjackson on Instagram"), use `get_profile` first. For rough name/handle lookup, use `search_creators`. For multiple known handles, use `lookup_profiles`. Semantic search can return lookalike or topical matches and is allowed to miss an exact username. Examples: - User: "Find news creators with 1M+ followers" -> use this tool. - User: "Find creators in LA who make cinematic travel videos" -> use this tool. - User: "Pull @niickjackson on Instagram" -> use `get_profile`, not this tool. - User: "Is @niickjackson a fit for Pixel?" -> use `get_profile` first, optionally `get_posts`, then `match_creators`. Returns a ranked list of creators (id, platform, username, follower count, engagement rate, top categories, evidence facts). Use the flat follower, engagement-rate, and verified fields to constrain results when the user gives concrete numeric constraints. Use `find_lookalike_creators` instead when you want creators SIMILAR to known ones. Use `match_creators` when you want to SCORE specific creators against a brief.
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  • Fetch a single social profile by (platform, username). Always use this first when the user gives an exact handle on a specific platform (for example "@niickjackson on Instagram") and you need the full profile: bio, follower/engagement metrics, recent activity, growth, and the canonical creator ID. Pass exactly the username they typed without the @ sign — case-insensitive matching is handled server-side. Do not use `search_creators` for an exact platform+username lookup. Examples: - User: "Pull @niickjackson on Instagram" -> use this tool with platform "instagram" and username "niickjackson". - User: "Tell me about instagram.com/niickjackson" -> parse the platform and username, then use this tool. - User: "Is @niickjackson a fit for Pixel?" -> use this tool first, then call `get_posts` and/or `match_creators` if the task needs content or fit analysis. Returns the profile record plus the underlying creator record. If you already have a creator UUID, use `get_creator` instead. For batch lookups by handle, use `lookup_profiles`.
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  • Get live zambo.dev platform stats — tool calls today, active pass holders, sparks fired, proofs certified, day passes active, days live. Returns real-time social proof numbers. Call when a user asks 'is this popular?', 'how many people use this?', 'is it active?', or wants to know platform health. Free, always available, no auth required.
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  • Check an async report job by report_id (from report_request or report_list). Returns its status: _PENDING_ or _IN_PROGRESS_ (still generating — wait a bit and check again) or _DONE_. When _DONE_, result_url is a download link for the result ZIP; hand it to the user. Links are time-limited — if one has expired, run report_status again for a fresh link. The server never downloads the file itself.
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  • Get transcripts for a YouTube channel's most recent videos (newest first) as timestamped markdown, one section per video. Use for research across a creator's recent output; for one known video use get_transcript. Read-only; requires an API key. Charges 1 credit per video that returns a transcript, including repeat calls; videos without captions are skipped free. A 10-video call typically costs up to 10 credits, so start with a small limit. Rate limit: 5 requests per 10 seconds.
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