Don't hardcode the world. Ask for it.
Agents that hardcode endpoints break the day the world changes. /v1/discover takes a plain-language need and returns ranked candidates, each with an explicit vantage: Dynamic Feed's own tools carry measured trust (real 24-hour uptime and latency from the published probe history, licence cleared, keyless recipe), while matching external MCP servers from the official registry index are listed too, honestly marked registry-reported and unmeasured. The ranking is transparent term overlap, no opaque relevance model, so you can see exactly why each candidate matched. It is the first piece of the connect-once router behind /answers and the MCP census: one entry point, the network finds the capability.
Say what you need. See who can do it, and how well.
Describe a capability in plain words. One keyless GET to /v1/discover returns ranked candidates: measured Dynamic Feed tools first, then matching external MCP servers from the official registry index, each carrying its vantage so unmeasured listings are never laundered into trust. Nothing is mocked and nothing is stored about you.
full response (JSON)
Hardcoded endpoints rot. Needs don't.
Every agent today ships with a frozen list of URLs, and every frozen list is wrong within months: sources move, licences change, servers die quietly. Discovery fixes the rot, but most directories create a worse problem: they rank self-declared metadata by popularity and present the result as if it were trust. Dynamic Feed refuses to blur that line. A candidate here is either measured, meaning real uptime and latency from a published probe history you can inspect on /reliability, or it is registry-reported, meaning we are relaying what a third party said about itself and telling you so. Same list, honest vantage per row, transparent term-overlap scores you can recompute yourself.
A ranked list with sources, not a seal of approval.
Discovery is advisory, not an endorsement and not a certification. External MCP servers are listed from the official registry's self-declared metadata, which Dynamic Feed has not measured, audited or vetted; connect to third-party servers at your own judgment. The word measured applies only to Dynamic Feed's own capabilities, via the published probe history on /reliability. Signed responses are tamper-evident, not tamper-proof. Zero personal data, and not legal advice.
For agents: one keyless call.
POST or GET /v1/discover with a plain-language need, then call the winner via /v1/batch or MCP. No key, no signup, structured JSON in and out, a vantage on every candidate.