Coral Protocol has launched Coral V1, in which external agents are introduced to streamline how developers implement and coordinate multi-agent systems, according to reports that are shared with Finbold on 19 September.
The update offers access to production-ready external agents on request, designed to reduce the overhead of the infrastructure and to speed up the implementation.
For the first time, developers can rent ready-made external agents and combine them with their own local agents in a single session, with an activity followed and optimized in Coral Studio through Threads and Telemetry.
Agent developers can state their external agents in the coral register and receive automatic payouts when their agents are used.
Roman Georgio, co-founder and CEO of Coral Protocol, said:
“The launch of Coral V1 with external agents embodies everything that Coral has worked so far: an AI ecosystem that can achieve almost everything by combining different agents, each with their own atmosphere of expertise. We are pleased to see how developers develop remote agents of what can be developed in Termen in Termen in Termen.”
Interoperability and cooperation between ecosystems
Coral V1 supports the creation, acquisition and adaptation of the external agent, supported by Coral’s Onchain payment system, powered by Solana (SOL).
In contrast to existing frameworks, rules for agent interaction can be set at the protocol level, so that cooperation and payments take place seamlessly about multi-agent workflows.
By introducing an organizational structure, with individual teams and defined processes that dictate how agents act on each other, Coral V1 aims to overcome restrictions in conventional frameworks where agents are treated as on -call functions.
The release of Coral V1 with external agents, in addition to a public register and automatic payment system, is intended to speed up the acceptance of multi-agent architectures.
Developers can compile advanced systems by mixing and matching from Coral’s growth library, with the extra certainty that agent makers are compensated when their tools are used.
Featured image via Shutterstock.
