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What's the changelog?
Where to find new features, improvements, and fixes. RSS feed, X account, and how often it's updated.
The Prompt Assay changelog is the public log of features, improvements, fixes, and migrations on the workbench. New entries land most weeks. The full archive lives at /changelog.
How to subscribe
- RSS feed: `/changelog/feed.xml`. Drop into any reader (Feedly, Inoreader, NetNewsWire) or pipe into a Slack / Discord webhook.
- Follow on X: @PromptAssay. Each entry is announced manually with a link back to the full write-up.
- Sidebar: signed-in users see a *What's new* link in the sidebar that opens the changelog directly.
- Newsletter: *The Assay* newsletter rolls up the month's notable shipped work. Subscribe at the /the-assay panel or in the site footer.
What you'll find there
Each entry is short, scannable, and dated. We tag entries by category so you can filter for what matters to you:
| Tag | What it means |
|---|---|
| Feature | A new capability on the workbench you can use today. |
| Improvement | A refinement to an existing capability (UX, performance, or polish). |
| Fix | A bug fix you may have noticed, or that we caught before you did. |
| Breaking change | An API or behavior change that may break existing usage. Read carefully. |
| Migration | A data migration or schema change with reader-visible impact. |
Cadence
We aim for one entry per week, posted Friday afternoon, covering that week's shipped work. Some weeks are quieter than others; we don't pad with marketing copy. If a week ships nothing reader-facing, we skip it. The goal is honest signal, not theatrical cadence.
Copy as markdown
Each entry has a *Copy as markdown* button that copies the title, date, category, link, and description as a markdown block. Useful for forwarding to your team, pasting into a Notion doc, or feeding into your own internal release-notes pipeline.
Why a public changelog
Two reasons. First, transparency: a public changelog makes the shipping cadence legible to anyone evaluating Prompt Assay against alternatives. Second, accountability: when the entries dry up, you'll see it. We'd rather you see the gap than spin up busy-work to hide it.