## What's New This update introduces markers — a deceptively simple feature that changes how your task list feels. Plus a new values explorer to deepen your self-knowledge, flow mode progress tracking, and faster navigation throughout the app. **Released:** Wednesday, February 26, 2026 ### Markers: Draw a Line, Win Your Day One of the most useful recent insights from coaching sessions is now a feature. Markers are visual section dividers you can add to your task list — and the simplest one might be one of the most powerful tools you can use to *win your day* (and your week). Here's the problem markers solve: you plan eight tasks for today. You finish five. That's a great day — but it doesn't *feel* like one, because three tasks are staring back at you. Your list treats every item the same, so there's no built-in way to win. Now, add an "if time allows" marker after your top five tasks. Same list, same work — but now finishing those five means you crossed everything above the line. You won the day. The remaining three are still there as stretch goals, but they're clearly marked as bonus, not failure. **Three built-in patterns to get you started:** - **"if time allows"** — separate commitment from aspiration - **"quick wins"** — shift from deep focus to lighter tasks - **"home & family"** — remind yourself your task list is for your whole life Click **+ marker** on any bucket header to pick one, or type `-- ` before any text in quick add to create a custom marker instantly. Markers have no checkbox, no duration, no priority — they're pure structure. Double-click to rename, drag to reorder, and they stay put when you bulk-move tasks between buckets. We've seen this simple concept radically change how people feel about their days. If you tend to plan ambitiously (and if you're here, you probably do), try adding one "if time allows" marker to your @today list tomorrow morning. It gives you permission to keep the aspiration while actually winning at it. [[Markers - Section Dividers|Full guide →]] ### Know Yourself: Values Explorer A new values experience helps you identify what matters most. Choose your top 3 values from 27 curated options across six categories — Character, Connection, Growth, Purpose, Wellbeing, and Expression — or create your own. Add a personal meaning to make each value truly yours. Your values now inform your AI coaching conversations too. When your coach understands what drives you, the guidance becomes more personal and more relevant to the life you're building. Find it at **Know Yourself → Values** in the sidebar, or encounter it during onboarding if you're new. ### Flow Mode: See Your Progress When you're deep in a flow session, hover over the timer bar to see task-level progress — how far you've come and what's ahead. It's a small touch that helps you stay oriented during long focus sessions without breaking your concentration. ### Navigate Faster - **Cmd-5** (or click the date in focus mode) jumps straight to your week view — see everything at a glance - **Navigate-to-parent arrows** in edit views let you quickly jump up to a task's parent project - **Help links** now open directly to the relevant page on the help website ### Table View Improvements The task table got smarter: redesigned sort headers with descriptive dropdowns, a new parent sort option, and markers render beautifully in table view too — with inline editing and easy deletion. Default sort order is now more intuitive right out of the box. ### Calendar Quick Actions Start a timer directly from the calendar edit dialog — no need to navigate away. The calendar forms have also been streamlined for a cleaner editing experience. ## How This Helps You Level Up These updates work together around a single theme: **know yourself, then act on it.** Values give you clarity about what matters. Markers translate that clarity into daily structure. Flow progress keeps you aware without pulling you out of deep work. And faster navigation means less time managing the tool and more time doing the work that matters. The deeper message of markers is worth sitting with: **realistic planning is not the same as low ambition** instead it's the core tool that lets you practice **intense commitment with optimal effort**. You can be ambitious *and* give yourself permission to win. That's what drawing the line is about.