This release is about trust — trusting that your tasks are where you put them, that you can get to the right place in one click, and that managing your email is one tap away. **Released:** Tuesday, May 12, 2026 ### Your Subtasks Stay Where You Put Them If you placed a subtask in @later or @next, it now shows up there. Previously, the app quietly filtered subtasks out of the @later list and the @next mini-bucket preview (to try to reduce noise) but this meant that a task you deliberately placed in @later could feel like it had vanished, even though the bucket badge counted it. The badge said "@later (5)" but you only saw four rows. That's the kind of small inconsistency that erodes trust in a task system. Now every bucket — @next, @today, @inbox, @later — shows every task you've placed there, subtasks included. New subtasks, bucket moves, and restores stream live to @later just like every other bucket. Your buckets reflect exactly what you put in them. ### Parent Context on Every List Row Subtasks in flat list views now show their parent inline, like this: `parent / title`. The parent is dimmed so the subtask's own name stays prominent, but you always know what it belongs to. Click the parent prefix and you jump straight to the outliner with that parent in view. This works on the Zen list, the Today list, highlighted tasks, and the table view. The parent prefix is hidden in places where it would be redundant (like an already-expanded card's subtask list) or where there isn't room for it (narrow screens), so it never gets in the way. ![[Flow Parent Task.png]] ### Jump to the Outline From Anywhere A new "Show in outliner" hover icon appears on every Zen list row — the same affordance that already existed in the table view. From any list, you can now hop to the outliner with the right task focused, without scrolling or searching. The calendar parent-pill arrow also jumps to the outline now instead of the table, so "go to parent" lands consistently in the same place. ![[Flow Jump to Outline.png]] Just hover over a task with your mouse, and you will see the "jump to this task in the outline" appear. ### "Cancel" Task Is Now "Delete" Task The button to remove a task used to be labeled "Cancel" — which most users (understandably) read as "dismiss this dialog." It's now labeled "Delete" everywhere a task gets removed: buttons, bulk actions, the focus-mode drop target, status filter dropdowns, and the help docs. Dialog and form-dismissal buttons still say "Cancel" because that's what they actually do. And yes, this still remains a "soft" delete. You can recover it by clicking on the "Delete" mini-bucket, or by going to the task table view (Cmd K, then Table), and choosing the "Deleted" filter. Double click on the task to see the "Restore" button. ### Smaller Polish - The Done and Delete mini-buckets in focus mode now sort newest-first, so the task you just completed sits at the top of the list — handy for "wait, I need to uncomplete that" moments. - The inline task edit form on your Tada list is now a compact zen header (icon + title) rather than a full row re-render, which was visually clashing with the dark edit form. The task content area is also clickable now, not just the icon. - A small bug in flow mode is fixed: Quick Add tasks no longer appear inside the focused outliner of an unrelated parent task. ### Unsubscribe From Emails Without Logging In Email unsubscribe links used to require you to log in first, which made opting out feel adversarial. Now every email footer carries a personal, one-click unsubscribe link that works whether you're logged in or not. The new landing page is minimal — confirm and you're out, no friction. This applies to all the emails you can opt out of. Transactional emails (billing receipts, account invitations) still send without unsubscribe footers, as required. ## How This Helps You Level Up The thread running through this release is trust. A task system you can't trust to remember what you put where is a task system you'll stop using. Buckets show every task you placed there. List rows show enough context to know what you're looking at. The outliner is one click away from any view, so the structure of your work is never far. And the small things — clear button labels, unsubscribe links that work — remove the kind of friction that quietly tells your brain "this tool doesn't have my back." When the tool gets out of your way, the work gets your full attention. That's the point.