
Apify x Jentic Agentic Happy Hour after MCP Dev Summit

Rod Rivera
Estimated read time: 3 min
Last updated: September 25, 2025
The MCP Developer Summit in London on 2 October 2025 is shaping up to be one of the most focused gatherings yet on the future of agentic software. Across a single day, developers and contributors will share case studies, dissect protocol choices, and debate the practical realities of deploying Model Context Protocol (MCP) servers and clients in production. The confirmed agenda already includes sessions from Shopify, Google, and Turkish Airlines, alongside security deep dives and registry proposals. It is a lot to take in.
Conferences like this are where ideas get formalized. But the truth is: some of the most important conversations happen in smaller, less structured spaces, after the slides are finished, after the Q&A sessions wrap up. That is why Apify and Jentic are co-hosting an informal meetup immediately following the summit.
If the summit is about understanding where MCP is going, the meetup is about connecting with the people who will build it. The capacity is limited, so registration is essential. But our intent is simple: to give everyone, from first-time attendees to core contributors, a space to keep talking.
Apify and Jentic bring different but complementary perspectives. Apify runs the world’s largest marketplace of scraping and automation tools, now exposing over 6,000 of those tools (Actors) via MCP. Jentic builds infrastructure that helps agents become enterprise-ready, with typed APIs, centralized credential management, and controlled testing sandboxes. We share the belief that MCP is the convergence point where tools and infrastructure meet.
At the summit, expect depth: sessions on sandboxing, OAuth, transport protocols, MCP-UI, registry design, memory persistence, and fault tolerance. But those sessions often raise more questions than they answer. Over a drink, you’ll be able to ask: What does “secure from day one” look like in a live MCP server? How should a multi-agent workflow manage session state and cleanup? Which integration patterns are proving reliable? These are the kinds of questions that flourish when developers compare notes offline.
For those already working with MCP, the meetup is an opportunity to surface tradeoffs, patterns, and failures. For newcomers, it’s a chance to hear war stories, test assumptions, and get pointers. For everyone, it’s a reminder: a protocol is only as strong as its community.
We look forward to meeting you at the MCP Developer Summit, and if you can make it afterward, even better. RSVP at our event page. We hope you’ll come by, meet new collaborators, and help shape the conversations that guide MCP’s next phase.
We also welcome you to sign up to our waitlist for our beta.