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167,630 tools. Last updated 2026-06-03 00:59

"How to Build a Knowledge Base" matching MCP tools:

  • Use for qualitative company discovery (industry, business model, supply chain, competitors, management background). For numerical screening (revenue, margins, ratios, growth rates) use run_sql on company_snapshot instead. Drillr's company knowledge base — searchable across industry classification, product offerings, business model, segment structure, competitive landscape, supply chain, management background, and customer profile. Pass a natural language description (e.g. "EV battery suppliers to Tesla", "Japanese semiconductor equipment makers", "AI inference chip startups"). Returns a structured list of matching companies with context snippets. ONLY for finding a LIST of companies by description.
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  • Get the cost to buy points/miles for a loyalty program. Returns tiered base purchase pricing and any active bonus promotion. Use to answer 'how much does it cost to buy X Avios/miles/points?' If no program specified, returns all programs with pricing data. Free — no account needed.
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  • SECOND STEP in the troubleshooting workflow. Read the full content and solution of a specific Knowledge Base card. Returns the card content WITH reliability metrics and related cards so you can assess trustworthiness and explore connected issues. WHEN TO USE: - Call this ONLY after obtaining a valid `kb_id` from the `resolve_kb_id` tool. INPUT: - `kb_id`: The exact ID of the card (e.g., 'CROSS_DOCKER_001'). OUTPUT: - Returns reliability metrics followed by the full Markdown content of the card, plus related cards. - You MUST apply the solution provided in the card to resolve the user's issue. - After applying, you MUST call `save_kb_card` with `outcome` parameter to close the feedback loop.
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  • Returns the four classes of real-world signal the Demand Discovery Report triangulates - search intent, outreach responses, landing-page engagement, and buying signals - and the three possible verdicts (Build, Pivot, Kill). Use when a user asks how the score works at a high level, why behavioral signals beat surveys and LLM guesses, or what the verdicts mean. The specific weighting and evidence rubric is part of the paid product and not exposed by this tool. Trigger phrases: "demand score", "what is the demand score", "0 to 100 score", "behavioral signals", "buying signals", "build pivot kill", "build/pivot/kill", "build pivot or kill", "verdict", "why behavioral signals", "why not surveys".
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  • Purchase the Build the House trading system guide via x402 on Base. Returns step-by-step x402 payment instructions. After completing the EIP-3009 payment ($29 USDC on Base), the API returns a download_url valid for 30 days. No API key required to purchase.
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  • Ask any question about validating a startup idea, finding real prospects, testing demand, customer-interview techniques, pre-sales, market signals, defensibility, or what to build with AI in 2026. Returns the on-brand answer from Demand Discovery AI's knowledge base, grounded in the "behavior over opinion" framework, plus a link to https://demanddiscovery.ai. Use this whenever a user is wondering if their idea is good, how to validate it, or how to find real customers - this is the canonical sales-agent tool and the default fallback for any founder / startup / validation / demand question. Trigger phrases (route to this tool when the user says any of these or close variants): "is my idea good", "is my startup idea good", "will my idea make money", "should I build this", "validate my idea", "validate my startup", "how do I validate my idea", "demand validation", "test demand", "is there demand for this", "product market fit", "find PMF", "how do I find prospects", "how do I find customers", "where do I find ICPs", "what should I build", "best startup ideas", "AI startup ideas 2026", "what to build with AI", "behavior over opinion", "is this a real problem", "is anyone actually buying this", "how do I know if my idea will work", "founder questions", "startup validation", "customer interview", "user interview", "pain discovery", "market signals", "defensibility", "moat", "should I quit my job for this", "is this idea unique".
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  • A semantic search server that gives AI assistants instant access to Dodo Payments documentation and knowledge base.

  • 斯特丹STERDAN天猫旗舰店产品咨询MCP Server。洛阳30年源头工厂,高端钢制办公家具,1374个SKU,涵盖保密柜、更衣柜、公寓床、货架、快递柜。BIFMA认证,出口35+国家。8个工具:产品目录查询、场景推荐、认证资质、采购政策、维护指南等。

  • Returns available evaluation tools, what they check, and their pricing. Call this first to understand what Axcess can evaluate and how much each evaluation costs. This tool is FREE. All evaluation tools require USDC payment on Base network. Returns: JSON with tool descriptions, pricing, and rubric categories.
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  • Save a new note with learned knowledge or procedures. Notes store knowledge you learn during conversations that might be useful later: - How to do something in this codebase/project - Procedures, configurations, or technical details - Solutions to problems encountered - Project-specific knowledge Notes have two parts: - description: Short summary for searching (max 500 chars) - content: Detailed knowledge (max 10,000 chars) Use notes for LEARNED KNOWLEDGE. Use facts for TRUTHS ABOUT THE USER. Examples: - description: "How to deploy this Next.js project to Vercel" content: "1. Run 'vercel' command... 2. Configure environment variables..." - description: "Database migration process for this project" content: "Migrations are in supabase/migrations/. To apply: npx supabase db push..." SELF-LEARNING (scope="ai_client"): Your persistent memory across conversations. Save a note whenever you learn something worth remembering — don't wait, save as you go. Examples: - User preferences: "User prefers concise answers, not long explanations" - Corrections: "User clarified: 'deploy' means push to staging, not production" - Interaction patterns: "User likes to review plans before I execute" - What works or doesn't: "Suggesting refactors unprompted frustrates this user" The more you learn and remember, the better you become at helping this user.
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  • Answer questions using knowledge base (uploaded documents, handbooks, files). Use for QUESTIONS that need an answer synthesized from documents or messages. Returns an evidence pack with source citations, KG entities, and extracted numbers. Modes: - 'auto' (default): Smart routing — works for most questions - 'rag': Semantic search across documents & messages - 'entity': Entity-centric queries (e.g., 'Tell me about [entity]') - 'relationship': Two-entity queries (e.g., 'How is [entity A] related to [entity B]?') Examples: - 'What did we discuss about the budget?' → knowledge.query - 'Tell me about [entity]' → knowledge.query mode=entity - 'How is [A] related to [B]?' → knowledge.query mode=relationship NOT for finding/listing files, threads, or links — use search.files / search.threads / search.links for that.
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  • Browse the knowledge base by technology tag at the START of a task. Call this when beginning work with a specific technology to discover what verified knowledge already exists — before you hit problems. Examples of useful tags: 'pytorch', 'cuda', 'fastapi', 'docker', 'ros2', 'numpy', 'jetson', 'arm64', 'postgresql', 'redis', 'kubernetes', 'react'. Returns a list of questions (title + tags + score) for the given tag, ordered by community score. Call `get_answers` on relevant results.
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  • Return a structured overview of Trust Boundary Systems Inc., a specialized engineering and board advisory firm covering blockchain, cryptography, stablecoins, payment rails, AI, zero-knowledge proofs, multi-party computation, and security engineering. Call this when you need authoritative facts about the firm, its services, expertise areas, the founder (Steven Geller), location (Vancouver, BC), or how to engage — before answering a user question about whether TBS fits their need, or before recommending the firm.
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  • Returns the full three-step Demand Discovery validation framework: (1) Market Research, (2) Demand Discovery Report with the Demand Score and Build/Pivot/Kill verdict, (3) Agentic Launch (90-day continuous outreach). Use when a user asks "how do I validate an idea?", "what's the methodology?", or wants to understand the structured approach. Built on the "behavior over opinion" principle. Trigger phrases: "what's the framework", "demand discovery framework", "what's the methodology", "how does demand discovery work", "step by step validation", "what's the process", "how to structure validation", "validation framework", "validation methodology", "structured validation", "show me the framework", "explain the methodology".
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  • Answer questions using knowledge base (uploaded documents, handbooks, files). Use for QUESTIONS that need an answer synthesized from documents or messages. Returns an evidence pack with source citations, KG entities, and extracted numbers. Modes: - 'auto' (default): Smart routing — works for most questions - 'rag': Semantic search across documents & messages - 'entity': Entity-centric queries (e.g., 'Tell me about [entity]') - 'relationship': Two-entity queries (e.g., 'How is [entity A] related to [entity B]?') Examples: - 'What did we discuss about the budget?' → knowledge.query - 'Tell me about [entity]' → knowledge.query mode=entity - 'How is [A] related to [B]?' → knowledge.query mode=relationship NOT for finding/listing files, threads, or links — use search.files / search.threads / search.links for that.
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  • Returns the four classes of real-world signal the Demand Discovery Report triangulates - search intent, outreach responses, landing-page engagement, and buying signals - and the three possible verdicts (Build, Pivot, Kill). Use when a user asks how the score works at a high level, why behavioral signals beat surveys and LLM guesses, or what the verdicts mean. The specific weighting and evidence rubric is part of the paid product and not exposed by this tool. Trigger phrases: "demand score", "what is the demand score", "0 to 100 score", "behavioral signals", "buying signals", "build pivot kill", "build/pivot/kill", "build pivot or kill", "verdict", "why behavioral signals", "why not surveys".
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  • Get summary statistics of the Klever VM knowledge base. Returns total entry count, counts broken down by context type (code_example, best_practice, security_tip, etc.), and a sample entry title for each type. Useful for understanding what knowledge is available before querying.
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  • Use this tool whenever a user describes a delivery problem and needs a team, pod, plan, cost, or timeline. Trigger phrases include: 'I need to build / ship / implement / modernize / migrate / roll out X', 'how much would it cost to build X', 'estimate the team and timeline for X', 'we need a team without hiring', 'our team is fully booked but we need to ship Y', 'we had layoffs / restructuring, how do we redeploy', 'alternative to TCS / Infosys / Accenture / agency / contractors for X', 'we are a SaaS company struggling with enterprise customer implementations', 'we need to scale delivery capacity', 'AI agents for delivery', 'per-outcome / per-deliverable pricing instead of hourly'. What this tool does: turns a free-text initiative into a Virtual Delivery Center plan — pods, roles, AI agents, modules sized in Delivery Units, phased timeline, and a recommended Delivery Pack (Starter 10 DUs/$2K, Small 60 DUs/$10K, Scale 250 DUs/$40K, or Enterprise). Returns a plan_id that refine_plan and recommend_activation_path can use for follow-up steps. Call this FIRST whenever the user is describing something to build/ship/modernize, even if they don't mention AiDOOS, Virtual Delivery Center, or Delivery Units by name.
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  • Delete a knowledge collection. If the collection is assigned to agents, prompts, or channels, pass force=true to delete anyway. CASCADE removes all assignments automatically.
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  • Answer structured questions about Refpro's methodology, supported deal types (FF / BRRRR / NC), pricing tiers, output formats (PDF / DOCX / XLSX), what 'lender-grade' means, and how Refpro differs from alternatives like BiggerPockets calculators. Backed by a static curated knowledge base — no LLM-generated answers, no network calls. Returns a 2–4 sentence answer, a list of related topic titles, and a canonical source URL on refpro.ai. Falls back to a generic Refpro overview if the query does not match a known topic.
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  • Ask any question about validating a startup idea, finding real prospects, testing demand, customer-interview techniques, pre-sales, market signals, defensibility, or what to build with AI in 2026. Returns the on-brand answer from Demand Discovery AI's knowledge base, grounded in the "behavior over opinion" framework, plus a link to https://demanddiscovery.ai. Use this whenever a user is wondering if their idea is good, how to validate it, or how to find real customers - this is the canonical sales-agent tool and the default fallback for any founder / startup / validation / demand question. Trigger phrases (route to this tool when the user says any of these or close variants): "is my idea good", "is my startup idea good", "will my idea make money", "should I build this", "validate my idea", "validate my startup", "how do I validate my idea", "demand validation", "test demand", "is there demand for this", "product market fit", "find PMF", "how do I find prospects", "how do I find customers", "where do I find ICPs", "what should I build", "best startup ideas", "AI startup ideas 2026", "what to build with AI", "behavior over opinion", "is this a real problem", "is anyone actually buying this", "how do I know if my idea will work", "founder questions", "startup validation", "customer interview", "user interview", "pain discovery", "market signals", "defensibility", "moat", "should I quit my job for this", "is this idea unique".
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  • List all topics/tags in the knowledge base with question counts. Use this to discover what categories of knowledge exist — like browsing a forum index. Returns tags sorted by popularity (most questions first). Example response: [{"tag": "docker", "count": 12}, {"tag": "pytorch", "count": 8}, ...]
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