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Four Fresh Agent Tools Just Dropped — TypeScript MCP, Infinite Canvas IDEs, and Smart Glass Assistants

MCPorter brings TypeScript to MCP servers, Collaborator rethinks dev environments, VisionClaw turns Ray-Bans into AI assistants.

March 31, 2026

Four Fresh Agent Tools Just Dropped — TypeScript MCP, Infinite Canvas IDEs, and Smart Glass Assistants

Four interesting tools launched this week, each pushing the agent ecosystem in different directions:

MCPorter — TypeScript Runtime for MCP

MCPorter solves the Model Context Protocol's biggest developer experience problem: actually using it. It auto-discovers MCP servers from your AI tools, generates typed TypeScript clients, and gives you a CLI for composing automations. Finally, MCP becomes something you can actually build with instead of just read about.

Collaborator — Infinite Canvas Development

Forget tabs and window switching. Collaborator arranges terminals, code files, and running agents on an infinite desktop canvas. It's a native app for macOS, Windows, and Linux that keeps everything visible at once. Perfect for agent workflows where you need to see the AI's context, your code, and the terminal output simultaneously.

VisionClaw — Ray-Ban Smart Glasses as AI Assistant

VisionClaw turns Meta Ray-Ban smart glasses into a real-time AI assistant. It streams your camera feed to Gemini while handling voice commands bidirectionally. See something interesting? Ask your glasses what it is. Need to remember something? Tell your glasses to save it. The cyberpunk future, but practical.

MiroShark — Multi-Agent Social Media Simulation

MiroShark generates hundreds of AI agents with unique personalities to simulate social media reactions. Upload a document and watch realistic opinion dynamics play out across Twitter, Reddit, and Polymarket. It's fascinating for understanding how ideas spread and public sentiment forms.

Each represents a different frontier: developer tooling, interface design, consumer AI, and simulation platforms. The agent ecosystem isn't just getting bigger — it's getting weirder and more specialized.