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Rolled Out's Changelog

Website

Oct 14, 2:55 PM

Sign in with Google and GitHub, show your org website, and cleaner app titles

Sign in with Google or GitHub

You can now sign up and log in with Google or GitHub. It’s faster, you don’t need another password, and teams can get started with the accounts they already use. Email and password still work if you prefer.

Set your organization’s website once

Add your company’s main website in organization settings or during onboarding. We’ll show it across the app and on your public board so teammates and visitors can quickly find the right site. You can update it anytime in settings.

Cleaner titles and icons in your browser

We updated page titles and favicons across the admin, marketing, and public apps. Tabs are easier to spot, bookmarks look better, and everything feels more consistent.

Author(s):

Ilya

Oct 9, 4:22 PM

A more polished hosted changelog

The hosted changelog got a visual cleanup so it feels more branded and easier to read on any device. The header is clearer, the layout adapts to mobile and tablets, and small text changes make posts easier to scan.

Your logo and title in the header

The public header now shows your organization’s avatar (or an initial) and displays your changelog title next to it, so visitors instantly know where they are.

Cleaner, mobile-friendly layout

We removed unnecessary navigation buttons from the public header, improved alignment, and made the page responsive for tablets and phones. The result is a cleaner look that reads well at any size.

Clearer post details

Post footers now say “Author(s)” instead of “Published by,” and public reactions are hidden to keep attention on the content of your updates.

Correct browser and page titles

Hosted changelog pages now show the correct title in the browser tab and across the page, so links and bookmarks are labeled properly.

Author(s):

Ilya

Sep 25, 1:45 PM

Quick draft creation from new commits

When your connected repositories get new commits on the base branch after your last draft, you’ll now see a callout. It clearly flags that there’s fresh work to review and offers two choices: start a new draft from those commits or dismiss the reminder.

This keeps your workflow moving. You don’t have to dig through commit history or wonder if your draft is up to date. If you’re ready, spin up a new draft immediately; if not, dismiss and come back when it suits you.

Author(s):

Ilya

Sep 24, 3:42 PM

Github & AI Integration

Turn commits into a draft in seconds

You can now connect your GitHub account and start a draft directly from your recent commits. Pick the changes that belong in the release and we’ll create a clear first draft for you. Edit it as needed and publish when it’s ready.

After you connect GitHub, the New Draft button becomes a dropdown with two options: Blank and From Commits. Choose From Commits to open a list of commits from the repositories you’ve authorized. Select the commits you want to include, and we generate a release note using AI that you can refine before sharing.

This removes copy‑paste work and speeds up writing. Your notes stay tied to the exact code you shipped, so it’s easier to explain what changed and ship updates with confidence.

Author(s):

Ilya