Launching today
LAD

LAD

How AI agents find each other on local networks

4 followers

A2A (Google's agent-to-agent protocol) handles how agents talk to each other. MCP handles how agents use tools. But neither answers a basic question: how do you find agents in the first place? So I built LAD-A2A, a simple discovery protocol. When you connect to a Wi-Fi, your agent can automatically find what's available using mDNS (like how AirDrop finds nearby devices) or a standard HTTP endpoint.
LAD gallery image
LAD gallery image
Free
Launch Team
Flowstep
Flowstep
Generate real UI in seconds
Promoted

What do you think? …

Francesco Villano
AI agents are getting really good at doing things, but they're completely blind to their physical surroundings. If you walk into a hotel and you have an AI assistant (like the Chatgpt mobile app), it has no idea there may be a concierge agent on the network that could help you book a spa, check breakfast times, or request late checkout. Same thing at offices, hospitals, cruise ships. The agents are there, but there's no way to discover them. A2A (Google's agent-to-agent protocol) handles how agents talk to each other. MCP handles how agents use tools. But neither answers a basic question: how do you find agents in the first place? So I built LAD-A2A, a simple discovery protocol. When you connect to a Wi-Fi, your agent can automatically find what's available using mDNS (like how AirDrop finds nearby devices) or a standard HTTP endpoint. The spec is intentionally minimal. I didn't want to reinvent A2A or create another complex standard. LAD-A2A just handles discovery, then hands off to A2A for actual communication. Open source, Apache 2.0. Includes a working Python implementation you can run to see it in action.
mostafa kh

honestly surprised this is so low on the list. this solves a real gap that nobody else is addressing.

google built a2a for agents to talk. anthropic pushed mcp for tools. but both assume you already know where the agents are. this is the missing discovery layer.

using mdns is clever too, same tech that makes airprint and spotify connect just work. hope more people notice this one.