If you're using MCP servers from Cursor or other editors, what has actually been useful day to day? Anything unexpected or surprising?
Comments (4)
tough · 3h ago
Mostly give them up to date documentation about the stack they're using, so they can consult tools instead of hallucinate stuff.
mbm · 18m ago
Awesome. Which servers do you use?
johnjungles · 4h ago
If you want to try out mcp (model context protocol) with little to no setup:
I built https://skeet.build/mcp where anyone can try out mcp for cursor and dev tools.
We did this because of a painpoint I experienced as an engineer having to deal with crummy mcp setup, lack of support you have no idea how hard it is to set up SSE, deal with API keys and scope issues, and then to find things like the tool that you want isn’t even coded yet.
And so one of the areas we found it to be useful was to do the soft communications with tools like Jira linear slack - updating stakeholders and all that friction that engineers hate doing. Some other areas people use a lot of tools with sequential thinking
Mostly for workflows that I like:
* start a PR with a summary of what I just did * slack or comment to linear/Jira with a summary of what I pushed * pull this issue from sentry and fix it * Find a bug a create a linear issue to fix it * pull this linear issue and do a first pass * pull in this Notion doc with a PRD then create an API reference for it based on this code * Postgres or MySQL schemas for rapid model development
Everyone seems to go for the hype but ease of use, practical pragmatic developer workflows, and high quality polished mcp servers are what we’re focused on
Lmk what you think!
codingdave · 1h ago
> Lmk what you think!
I think you've been posting variations on this comment for almost 2 months. If you have something to show, do a "Show HN". You'll get a far better response by doing so than from a plethora of self-promotional comments.
I think you've been posting variations on this comment for almost 2 months. If you have something to show, do a "Show HN". You'll get a far better response by doing so than from a plethora of self-promotional comments.