Imagine not having AI “guess” what a web page should look like—but having it connect to Safari and verify the *real* rendered result. Recently, Safari Technology Preview 247 added a Safari MCP Server (Model Context Protocol). If your dev agent/client supports MCP, you can connect to the current Safari browser window and stream the live state back to your AI proxy—dramatically speeding up front-end debugging, compatibility checks, performance analysis, and accessibility testing. MCP is a communication layer that helps AI agents talk to external tools and data sources. Previously, when Safari mis-rendered layout, ignored clicks, or broke data loading, developers would bounce between DevTools, styles, console errors, and network logs—then capture screenshots or manually describe issues for the model. With the Safari MCP Server, the agent can “see” what Safari is actually doing. It supports practical operations like navigating to URLs, switching tabs, reading console messages, inspecting network requests, executing JavaScript, extracting page content, and taking screenshots. Even better: it can simulate user actions (click, input, scroll, hover, key presses). Apple notes it runs locally only and won’t access autofill or personal browsing data. #Safari #MCP #FrontendDev #AIagents #WebTesting #Accessibility
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