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Estimote MCP Server for Cursor 10 tools — connect in under 2 minutes

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Cursor is an AI-first code editor built on VS Code that integrates LLM-powered coding assistance directly into the development workflow. Its Agent mode enables autonomous multi-step coding tasks, and MCP support lets agents access external data sources and APIs during code generation.

Vinkius supports streamable HTTP and SSE.

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Classic Setup·json
{
  "mcpServers": {
    "estimote": {
      "url": "https://edge.vinkius.com/[YOUR_TOKEN_HERE]/mcp"
    }
  }
}
Estimote
Fully ManagedVinkius Servers
60%Token savings
High SecurityEnterprise-grade
IAMAccess control
EU AI ActCompliant
DLPData protection
V8 IsolateSandboxed
Ed25519Audit chain
<40msKill switch
Stream every event to Splunk, Datadog, or your own webhook in real-time

* Every MCP server runs on Vinkius-managed infrastructure inside AWS - a purpose-built runtime with per-request V8 isolates, Ed25519 signed audit chains, and sub-40ms cold starts optimized for native MCP execution. See our infrastructure

About Estimote MCP Server

Connect your Estimote Cloud account to any AI agent and take full control of your beacon fleet management and proximity data workflows through natural conversation.

Cursor's Agent mode turns Estimote into an in-editor superpower. Ask Cursor to generate code using live data from Estimote and it fetches, processes, and writes. all in a single agentic loop. 10 tools appear alongside file editing and terminal access, creating a unified development environment grounded in real-time information.

What you can do

  • Fleet Orchestration — List all Estimote beacons including Proximity, Location, and Stickers, returning identifiers, hardware types, and current battery levels natively
  • Device Shadow Management — Retrieve detailed configurations and status for specific beacons and update broadcasting parameters or transmission power through the shadow system
  • Proximity Analytics — Pull detection counts, unique visitor estimates, and dwell time distributions over specified periods to measure real-world engagement
  • Real-time Telemetry — Access live sensor data including temperature readings, ambient light levels, motion detection, and barometric pressure from supported hardware
  • Physical Location Auditing — Register and manage venues, buildings, or stores, providing geographic coordinates for beacon organization and analytics grouping
  • Taxonomy & Tagging — List fleet tags and assign organizational labels to devices for logical grouping and proximity campaign targeting
  • Decommissioning Oversight — Permanently remove beacon devices from your cloud account while maintaining physical broadcasting for legacy integrations

The Estimote MCP Server exposes 10 tools through the Vinkius. Connect it to Cursor in under two minutes — no API keys to rotate, no infrastructure to provision, no vendor lock-in. Your configuration, your data, your control.

How to Connect Estimote to Cursor via MCP

Follow these steps to integrate the Estimote MCP Server with Cursor.

01

Open MCP Settings

Press Cmd+Shift+P (macOS) or Ctrl+Shift+P (Windows/Linux) → search "MCP Settings"

02

Add the server config

Paste the JSON configuration above into the mcp.json file that opens

03

Save the file

Cursor will automatically detect the new MCP server

04

Start using Estimote

Open Agent mode in chat and ask: "Using Estimote, help me...". 10 tools available

Why Use Cursor with the Estimote MCP Server

Cursor AI Code Editor provides unique advantages when paired with Estimote through the Model Context Protocol.

01

Agent mode turns Cursor into an autonomous coding assistant that can read files, run commands, and call MCP tools without switching context

02

Cursor's Composer feature can generate entire files using real-time data fetched through MCP. no copy-pasting from external dashboards

03

MCP tools appear alongside built-in tools like file reading and terminal access, creating a unified agentic environment

04

VS Code extension compatibility means your existing workflow, keybindings, and extensions all work alongside MCP tools

Estimote + Cursor Use Cases

Practical scenarios where Cursor combined with the Estimote MCP Server delivers measurable value.

01

Code generation with live data: ask Cursor to generate a security report module using live DNS and subdomain data fetched through MCP

02

Automated documentation: have Cursor query your API's tool schemas and generate TypeScript interfaces or OpenAPI specs automatically

03

Infrastructure-as-code: Cursor can fetch domain configurations and generate corresponding Terraform or CloudFormation templates

04

Test scaffolding: ask Cursor to pull real API responses via MCP and generate unit test fixtures from actual data

Estimote MCP Tools for Cursor (10)

These 10 tools become available when you connect Estimote to Cursor via MCP:

01

assign_tag_to_beacon

If the tag does not exist, it is created automatically. A device can have multiple tags. Use to organize beacons by floor, zone, store section, or campaign. Tags persist in the cloud and do not require physical beacon access. Assign an organizational tag to a specific Estimote beacon device, adding it to a logical group for fleet management, analytics filtering, and proximity campaign targeting

02

create_physical_location

After creating a location, assign beacon devices to it for organized fleet management and location-scoped analytics. Use when deploying beacons at a new site. Register a new physical location (store, office, venue) in Estimote Cloud, providing the site name, street address, and geographic coordinates for beacon fleet organization and analytics grouping

03

get_beacon_details

The identifier is the beacon MAC address or Estimote Cloud ID. Returns the full device shadow including pending settings changes. Use to diagnose beacon configuration issues or verify firmware update status. Retrieve detailed configuration and status for a specific Estimote beacon device, including its current broadcasting power, advertising interval, sensor readings, firmware version, and physical location assignment

04

get_beacon_telemetry

Returns the most recent sensor readings from the beacon. Not all sensors are available on all hardware models. Estimote Proximity Beacons support temperature and motion; Location Beacons add light and pressure sensors. Use for environmental monitoring and occupancy detection. Retrieve real-time sensor telemetry data from a specific Estimote beacon, including temperature readings, ambient light levels, accelerometer motion detection, magnetometer orientation, and barometric pressure where supported by hardware

05

get_device_analytics

Supports query parameters for date range (from, to), device identifier, and tag filtering. Returns aggregated metrics showing how many mobile devices detected each beacon. Use for foot traffic analysis, retail engagement measurement, and space utilization studies. Retrieve proximity analytics data for Estimote beacon devices, including detection counts, unique visitor estimates, dwell time distributions, and engagement metrics over a specified time period

06

list_beacon_devices

estimote.com. Returns a paginated array of beacon objects. Each beacon includes its MAC address (the most reliable identifier), iBeacon UUID/Major/Minor, Eddystone namespace/instance, and shadow settings. Use to inventory your deployed beacon fleet. List all Estimote beacon devices registered in your Estimote Cloud account, returning device identifiers, hardware types (Proximity/Location/Sticker), battery levels, firmware versions, and current configuration status

07

list_fleet_tags

Returns an array of tag objects with names and associated device counts. Tags are the primary organizational mechanism in Estimote Cloud. Use to understand your current fleet taxonomy before assigning or filtering devices. List all organizational tags defined in your Estimote Cloud account, which are used to group and categorize beacon devices by location, use case, department, or any custom classification scheme

08

list_physical_locations

Returns an array of location objects. Locations serve as containers for organizing beacons by physical site. Each location can have multiple beacon devices assigned to it. Use to audit your deployment footprint across multiple sites. List all physical locations (venues/buildings/stores) registered in your Estimote Cloud account, returning location names, addresses, geographic coordinates, and the number of beacons deployed at each site

09

remove_beacon_device

WARNING: This permanently removes the device from your fleet. The beacon will continue broadcasting but will no longer be managed by Estimote Cloud. Only use when decommissioning hardware. The device can be re-added later via the Estimote app. Permanently remove an Estimote beacon device from your Cloud account, deleting all associated configuration, analytics history, and location assignments. This action is irreversible

10

update_beacon_settings

Changes are queued in the cloud shadow and synchronized to the physical beacon when a device running the Estimote SDK connects to it. Common updates include name, tags, broadcasting power (dBm), and advertising interval (ms). Update the configuration of a specific Estimote beacon device by modifying its broadcasting parameters, advertising interval, transmission power, or attached metadata tags through the Estimote Cloud shadow system

Example Prompts for Estimote in Cursor

Ready-to-use prompts you can give your Cursor agent to start working with Estimote immediately.

01

"List all my beacons and their current battery status"

02

"What is the current temperature at 'Beacon-XYZ'?"

03

"Show me visitor analytics for the 'Main Store' tag from last month"

Troubleshooting Estimote MCP Server with Cursor

Common issues when connecting Estimote to Cursor through the Vinkius, and how to resolve them.

01

Tools not appearing in Cursor

Ensure you are in Agent mode (not Ask mode). MCP tools only work in Agent mode.
02

Server shows as disconnected

Check Settings → Features → MCP and verify the server status. Try clicking the refresh button.

Estimote + Cursor FAQ

Common questions about integrating Estimote MCP Server with Cursor.

01

What is Agent mode and why does it matter for MCP?

Agent mode is Cursor's autonomous execution mode where the AI can perform multi-step tasks: reading files, editing code, running terminal commands, and calling MCP tools. Without Agent mode, Cursor operates in a simpler ask-and-answer mode that doesn't support tool calling. Always ensure you're in Agent mode when working with MCP servers.
02

Where does Cursor store MCP configuration?

Cursor looks for MCP server configurations in a mcp.json file. You can configure servers at the project level (.cursor/mcp.json in your project root) or globally (~/.cursor/mcp.json). Project-level configs take precedence.
03

Can Cursor use MCP tools in inline edits?

No. MCP tools are only available in Agent mode through the chat panel. Inline completions and Tab suggestions do not trigger MCP tool calls. This is by design. tool calls require user visibility and approval.
04

How do I verify MCP tools are loaded?

Open Settings → Features → MCP and look for your server name. A green indicator means the server is connected. You can also check Agent mode's available tools by clicking the tools dropdown in the chat panel.

Connect Estimote to Cursor

Get your token, paste the configuration, and start using 10 tools in under 2 minutes. No API key management needed.