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133,382 tools. Last updated 2026-05-25 16:29

"Using the internet for searches" matching MCP tools:

  • Semantic search across the user's entire library by meaning, theme, or vibe. Searches every book/movie/album/show/anime as one corpus. Use for cross-media or thematic questions like "things about grief" or "noir mood". For specific title/creator lookups, use the keyword `search` tool instead.
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  • Searches a curated catalog of 600+ free, public APIs that require no authentication and work over HTTPS — ideal for embedding live data in display HTML pages via fetch(). Covers 47 categories including weather, news, finance, sports, images, food, entertainment, science, geocoding and more. Use this when generating HTML that needs live data from the internet. Returns matching APIs with documentation links, CORS support info and ready-to-use fetch() code hints. Use list_public_api_categories first if you want to offer the user a category-driven menu before searching. No authentication required.
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  • Get a snapshot of the quantum computing landscape — no parameters needed. Use when the user asks broad questions like "how's the quantum job market?", "what are trending topics?", or wants an overview of the quantum computing industry. Returns: total active jobs, top hiring companies, jobs by role type, papers published this week, total researchers tracked, and trending technology tags. For specific job/paper/researcher searches, use the dedicated search tools instead.
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  • Add a new contact for the user. A verification code (OTP) will be sent to the contact address. The user must verify the contact using openmandate_verify_contact before it can be used on mandates. The first contact added becomes the primary contact automatically.
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  • Search across ALL string properties of ALL nodes in a deployed graph using free-text queries. Unlike search_graph_nodes (which filters by specific property), this searches every text field at once. Perfect for finding knowledge when you don't know which property contains the answer. Example: query "quantum" searches name, description, summary, notes, and all other string fields. Returns nodes with _match_fields showing which properties matched. Optionally filter by entity_type to narrow results.
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  • Search the MeSH vocabulary for standardized medical terms. Find MeSH (Medical Subject Headings) descriptors to use in precise PubMed searches. Returns MeSH IDs, preferred terms, and scope notes. Args: term: Search term (e.g. 'diabetes', 'heart failure', 'opioid'). limit: Maximum results (default 10).
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  • Give your AI agent a phone. Place outbound calls to US businesses to ask, book, or confirm.

  • The Graph MCP — indexed blockchain data via subgraph GraphQL queries

  • The unit tests (code examples) for HMR. Always call `learn-hmr-basics` and `view-hmr-core-sources` to learn the core functionality before calling this tool. These files are the unit tests for the HMR library, which demonstrate the best practices and common coding patterns of using the library. You should use this tool when you need to write some code using the HMR library (maybe for reactive programming or implementing some integration). The response is identical to the MCP resource with the same name. Only use it once and prefer this tool to that resource if you can choose.
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  • Assess the likely parliamentary reception of a policy proposal. Searches Hansard for relevant debate contributions, then uses LLM sampling to classify sentiment and extract supporters, opponents, and key concerns. Degrades gracefully if sampling is unavailable — returns contributions only.
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  • AI-powered company analysis using semantic search over Nordic financial data. Orchestrates multiple searches internally and returns a synthesized narrative answer with source citations. Covers annual reports, quarterly reports, press releases and macroeconomic context for Nordic listed companies. Use this when you want a synthesized answer rather than raw search chunks. For raw data access, use search_filings or company_research instead. For a full due diligence report with AI-planned sections, use the Alfred MCP server: alfred.aidatanorge.no/mcp Args: company: Company name or ticker question: What you want to know about the company model: 'haiku' (default) or 'sonnet'
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  • # Instructions 1. Query OpenTelemetry metrics stored in Axiom using MPL (Metrics Processing Language). NOT APL. 2. The query targets a metrics dataset (kind "otel-metrics-v1"). 3. Use listMetrics() to discover available metric names in a dataset before querying. 4. Use listMetricTags() and getMetricTagValues() to discover filtering dimensions. 5. ALWAYS restrict the time range to the smallest possible range that meets your needs. 6. NEVER guess metric names or tag values. Always discover them first. # MPL Query Syntax A query has three parts: source, filtering, and transformation. Filters must appear before transformations. ## Source ``` <dataset>:<metric> ``` Backtick-escape identifiers containing special characters: ``my-dataset``:``http.server.duration`` ## Filtering (where) Chain filters with `|`. Use `where` (not `filter`, which is deprecated). ``` | where <tag> <op> <value> ``` Operators: ==, !=, >, <, >=, <= Values: "string", 42, 42.0, true, /regexp/ Combine with: and, or, not, parentheses ## Transformations ### Aggregation (align) — aggregate data over time windows ``` | align to <interval> using <function> ``` Functions: avg, sum, min, max, count, last Intervals: 5m, 1h, 1d, etc. ### Grouping (group) — group series by tags ``` | group by <tag1>, <tag2> using <function> ``` Functions: avg, sum, min, max, count Without `by`: combines all series: `| group using sum` ### Mapping (map) — transform values in place ``` | map rate // per-second rate of change | map increase // increase between datapoints | map + 5 // arithmetic: +, -, *, / | map abs // absolute value | map fill::prev // fill gaps with previous value | map fill::const(0) // fill gaps with constant | map filter::lt(0.4) // remove datapoints >= 0.4 | map filter::gt(100) // remove datapoints <= 100 | map is::gte(0.5) // set to 1.0 if >= 0.5, else 0.0 ``` ### Computation (compute) — combine two metrics ``` ( `dataset`:`errors_total` | group using sum, `dataset`:`requests_total` | group using sum; ) | compute error_rate using / ``` Functions: +, -, *, /, min, max, avg ### Bucketing (bucket) — for histograms ``` | bucket by method, path to 5m using histogram(count, 0.5, 0.9, 0.99) | bucket by method to 5m using interpolate_delta_histogram(0.90, 0.99) | bucket by method to 5m using interpolate_cumulative_histogram(rate, 0.90, 0.99) ``` ### Prometheus compatibility ``` | align to 5m using prom::rate // Prometheus-style rate ``` ## Identifiers Use backticks for names with special characters: ``my-dataset``, ``service.name``, ``http.request.duration`` # Examples Basic query: `my-metrics`:`http.server.duration` | align to 5m using avg Filtered: `my-metrics`:`http.server.duration` | where `service.name` == "frontend" | align to 5m using avg Grouped: `my-metrics`:`http.server.duration` | align to 5m using avg | group by endpoint using sum Rate: `my-metrics`:`http.requests.total` | align to 5m using prom::rate | group by method, path, code using sum Error rate (compute): ( `my-metrics`:`http.requests.total` | where code >= 400 | group by method, path using sum, `my-metrics`:`http.requests.total` | group by method, path using sum; ) | compute error_rate using / | align to 5m using avg SLI (error budget): ( `my-metrics`:`http.requests.total` | where code >= 500 | align to 1h using prom::rate | group using sum, `my-metrics`:`http.requests.total` | align to 1h using prom::rate | group using sum; ) | compute error_rate using / | map is::lt(0.2) | align to 7d using avg Histogram percentiles: `my-metrics`:`http.request.duration.seconds.bucket` | bucket by method, path to 5m using interpolate_delta_histogram(0.90, 0.99) Fill gaps: `my-metrics`:`cpu.usage` | map fill::prev | align to 1m using avg
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  • Search award flight availability across ALL supported airlines for a route and date. Searches British Airways, Cathay Pacific, Virgin Atlantic, Alaska Airlines, and American Airlines in parallel. Returns combined results grouped by airline. This is the recommended starting point — use single-airline search only if you need a specific airline. Requires sign-in. Free accounts get 10 economy searches/month; paid plans get unlimited searches across every cabin.
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  • Search for round-trip flights using Google Flights. Returns flight options with airlines, departure/arrival times, prices, and booking information. **Workflow for selecting flights:** 1. Search with departure_id, arrival_id, outbound_date, and return_date to get outbound flight options 2. Each outbound flight includes a departure_token 3. Call again with departure_token to see return flight options for that outbound flight 4. Selected flight pairs include a booking_token for final booking details For one-way flights, use google_flights_one_way instead. For flexible date searches, use google_flights_calendar_round_trip to find the cheapest date combinations first.
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  • Get the currently approved DKIM vendor domains exposed by the public agent endpoint. Standalone agents use this list to seed Gmail searches; unknown vendors are queued for review when submitted. No authentication required.
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  • Assess the likely parliamentary reception of a policy proposal. Searches Hansard for relevant debate contributions, then uses LLM sampling to classify sentiment and extract supporters, opponents, and key concerns. Degrades gracefully if sampling is unavailable — returns contributions only.
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  • Full-text search in your notebook. By default searches only your own notes. Pass filter_agent_id=<int> to search another agent's notebook, or "all" (or "*") for workspace-wide. Or list all notes for a person/thread by scope_ref_id.
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  • Search for emails in Gmail to find specific messages or filter the inbox. Use this when the user wants to find emails by sender, subject, date, content, or other criteria. Returns email summaries suitable for listing and overview - to read full email content, attachments, or HTML body, use get_email with the returned email ID. This tool searches across all folders unless specified otherwise in the query.
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  • Semantic search over the full text of CJP public-discipline decisions (250 PDFs ingested). Use this for topic questions ("racial bias", "drug-related misconduct", "ex parte communications") or when you need passages, not just summary records. Returns matching passages with citations. Distinct from search_cjp (which searches the summary-record JSON).
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  • Check whether a specific internet domain name is available for registration. Returns availability status, price, and alternatives if taken. WHEN TO USE: user asks 'is X.com available?' or 'can I register Y.io?'. ALWAYS call this before register_new_domain.
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  • Search the web using Bing. Returns organic results, related searches and more. Alternative to Google for web search with different ranking algorithms and results.
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  • Quick on-chain reputation check using only the PayCrow Reputation contract. Free, no API keys needed. Use trust_score_query for the full composite score.
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