Business & Technology
Mixpanel launches Headless SDK for AI agents & coders
SOFIAH NICHOLE SALIVIO
News Editor
Mixpanel has launched Mixpanel Headless, a software development kit that gives AI agents and developers programmatic access to its product analytics platform. The tool is available in early access.
The SDK exposes dashboards, reports, cohorts, funnels, experiments and alerts as typed Python objects, letting users interact with the platform through code rather than its standard interface.
Mixpanel is targeting developers and teams building AI-driven workflows around product data. The aim is to remove the trade-off between using a dedicated analytics platform for deeper analysis and working directly with warehouse data for greater programmability.
Under the new setup, tasks previously handled in the interface can be called through software. This allows teams to schedule analyses, version outputs, share scripts across teams, and combine Mixpanel data with other Python libraries and external systems.
The SDK is intended for repeatable processes and more structured automation, rather than chat-based interactions that disappear when a session ends. Results can also be checked in code, with Python executing the analysis written by a model.
The launch follows the recent introduction of Mixpanel AI, which added specialised agents, a context engine and integrations with other workplace tools. Mixpanel Headless extends that approach by making more of the product available directly to developers and software agents.
AI agents can already use MCP integrations for a conversational route into the platform, while Headless is designed to provide broader access across query types, reports and actions when deeper programmatic work is needed.
Developer focus
The release reflects a broader shift in software design as companies adapt products for both human operators and AI systems. In analytics, that has created pressure to make established tools accessible in ways that fit automated workflows as well as traditional interfaces.
Mixpanel argues that software agents are becoming part of how digital products are built and analysed, creating demand for interfaces that machines can use more directly. By packaging the platform’s functions as Python code objects, it is aiming to place its analytics tools more firmly inside developer pipelines.
That may appeal to engineering and data teams that want to connect product usage analysis with other systems, such as internal tools or broader reporting processes. It also aligns with the growing use of Python as a common language for analytics, automation and machine learning.
Mixpanel says more than 29,000 companies use its platform to understand how people interact with their products. It operates in a market where analytics providers are increasingly adding AI features while trying to remain useful to technical users who want direct control over workflows and outputs.
One question for vendors in this segment is how far they can expose their products to code without undermining the ease of use that made interface-led analytics tools popular in the first place. Mixpanel’s latest release suggests it sees those approaches as complementary rather than competing.
Anant Gupta, Mixpanel’s Chief Technology Officer, said: “We’ve built one of the best product analytics experiences in the industry for the humans doing the work. Today, agents are teammates in how products get built, and they need an interface designed for how they actually work, not a UI built for humans. That’s Mixpanel Headless. It’s perfect for building real agentic flows that need to be scheduled, repeatable, and composed with other systems.”
Business & Technology
Major milestone as Oxford North office and labs now open
Located within Oxford North, a £1.2 billion innovation district, the fully fitted lab and office space marks the latest milestone in the development of the 64-acre site.
The space is designed to support start-ups, spin-outs, and established businesses across the life sciences, technology and artificial intelligence sectors.
Simon Ruck, managing director of Oxford North, said: “Oxford North has been purposely designed to support businesses at all stages of their development, from start-ups to scale-ups to global corporates.
“Fast-growing businesses require flexible, adaptable space, and this fully fitted lab space means companies can expand quickly in line with funding and research milestones, saving time and costs on fit-outs and delivering operational efficiencies.
“This is essential for smaller companies across the science, technology and innovation sectors.
“Delivering this latest phase at Oxford North, on time, is an important step as we continue building out one of the UK’s most dynamic mixed-use ecosystems, which benefits stakeholders across the city and beyond.”
The new labs, totalling 13,500 sq ft, include on-site technical support, a shared equipment room, and access to specialised facilities such as an -80°C freezer and a fume cupboard.
The associated write-up space features sit-stand desks and has a direct data connection to its lab.
Oxford North’s first phase also includes The Red Hall, a 33,000 sq ft workspace hub spread across four floors.
A new 100-seat auditorium is part of the community-focused amenities on the ground floor of The Red Hall and is available for hire.
Designed to support collaboration across the district, the auditorium can be used for conferences, lectures, or subdivided for smaller meetings and seminars.
Co-working and breakout areas for up to 40 people are located nearby, alongside Taylor’s Oxford North café, which faces Fallaize Park.
The scheme is being delivered by Oxford North Ventures, a joint venture between Thomas White Oxford (the development arm of St John’s College), Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, and London property developer Stanhope.
Kevin Darvishi, head of leasing at Stanhope, said: “This is the latest milestone in our vision to create the UK’s leading purpose-built innovation district which caters for the whole science and technology lifecycle ecosystem.”
Oxford North already counts international law firm Mishcon de Reya among its occupiers.
The firm recently signed a five-year lease for 3,500 sq ft of office space on the first floor of The Red Hall.
Business & Technology
Thames Water customers to use water wisely after dry Spring
The company is reminding people across the Thames supply region to conserve water as spring has so far been ‘very dry’.
A spokesman for Thames Water said: “This spring has been very dry so far and it is vital that we all play our part and use water wisely through periods of dry weather.
“Our water resources are in a reasonably healthy place now, but we are constantly monitoring reservoir levels, groundwater levels, and river flows.
“We all have a role to play when it comes to saving water and we encourage everybody to play their part in conversing resources where possible.”
Thames Water supplies more than 2.6 billion litres of water each day to 10.1 million customers.
Approximately 70 per cent of that supply comes from rivers and reservoirs, with the remaining 30 per cent drawn from underground aquifers.
In April 2026, just 38 per cent of the long-term average rainfall was recorded across England, according to the Met Office.
Temperatures were also 1.1C higher than average, making it the seventh warmest April on record.
The South East was classified as a ‘seriously water stressed’ region by the Government in 2007.
Thames Water continues to monitor conditions closely and promote water efficiency to help protect against potential shortages.
Business & Technology
Indian restaurant gains five stars after previous zero food hygiene rating
An Indian restaurant in Bicester has turned its food hygiene rating around, jumping from a low zero score to a five-out-of-five ‘very good’ rating.
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