With the change to token based billing, I pay a lot more attention on what my AI agents are doing. Although some info is available, I was missing the tools to evaluate my token consumption and have an in-depth understanding of what's going on. Until I discovered AgentsView. AgentsView is a local-first desktop and web app that reads those files and gives you a proper UI to work with them: browse sessions, search across all message content, see tool calls and thinking blocks, and get a quick health grade for each session. Let's install it and see what it actually looks like. Installation There are a few ways in, pick whatever fits your workflow. As a Windows user I decided to grab the latest .exe or .AppImage from the GitHub Releases page . The desktop app is fully bundled and auto-updates. Executing the downloaded executable will walk you through an installation wizard. Remark: There is also a CLI which uses the same data directory. Running it If you went the...
You built an MCP server in C#. It works great on your machine. Now you want to share it with colleagues, publish it to the community, or ship it as part of a product. The problem? Every time someone wants to use a local MCP server, they have to clone a repo, install runtimes, hand-edit a JSON config file, get the path wrong, edit it again... you know the drill. MCP Bundles ( .mcpb ) solve exactly that. They're the .vsix of the MCP ecosystem: a single file that a supporting app (like Claude for Desktop) opens with one click to present a guided install dialog. No terminal, no JSON editing, no "works on my machine." This post walks through taking a C# MCP server binary and packaging it into a distributable .mcpb file from scratch. What's inside a .mcpb file? Before touching anything, it helps to understand what you're building. A .mcpb file is just a ZIP archive with a specific structure: my-server.mcpb (ZIP file) ├── manifest.json ← required: ...