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May updates

This past month has been focused on bug bashing, but also some fun product updates!

May updates
Note
CloseThis blog post is from 2019. Contents (and screenshots) may be a bit of out date, but we've kept it up out of posterity.

Welcome to May! I wrote this from two places:

  1. the lounge of Seattle’s Sorrento Hotel, counting down the minutes until Silent Reading Party (a truly insufferable city tradition that I love dearly) begins;
  2. the promenade of Cal Anderson Park, on a particularly sunny Saturday.

I wrote last month that April was going to be filled with small and necessary work, a nice step back before diving into some renewed projects. It was exactly that!

Buttondown has been buggy the past few months. It feels bad to admit that, but it's true; the "bugs" tag in my issue tracker has been growing wider and more bulbous, and it feels good (and, frankly, necessary) to dedicate some time tackling it.

Still, I was able to get some fun stuff done:

Email domains for all

I announced last month that I had added support for custom SPIF/DKM records for premium accounts, and I'm thrilled to announce that it's now available for <em>everyone</em>. If you own your own domain, you can now use it to sign the emails you send from Buttondown, greatly improving deliverability:

There are a couple reasons why I decided to make this a free feature: but it really comes down to one thing: deliverability is important, and it feels gross to essentially gate high deliverability behind $29/month.

UTM sources

In what may be the most niche feature ever, you can now automatically apply UTM tags to all outgoing links from your newsletter.

Twitter support for meta tags

Sharing your newsletter on Twitter looks prettier!

What’s next

May is going to also be a heavy bug-squash-and-technical-debt month, but with a couple meatier things to handle:

  1. CAPTCHA support for embedded signup forms. (Lots of folks have complained about getting spammy subscribers: I hear you, and this should help with that!)
  2. A nicer writing UI. (The first major UI change since I launched Buttondown in 2017!)

Published on

May 5, 2019

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Written by

Justin Duke

Justin Duke is a software engineer, lover of words, and the creator of Buttondown.

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