We highlight recently released features on this page. Please visit the Change Log for a full history.
October 2022 - Introducing the Site Switcher
Do you have multiple sites? The Site Switcher makes it easier for your users to navigate between them. An item in the navigation menu shows the sites you want your users to have quick access to.
August 2022 - Collect and manage user feedback in Refined
Now you can collect and manage user input by enabling Feedback at the space level.
When Feedback is switched on:
Users can provide input (anonymously if they wish) on pages to flag outdated material, request more/different information, etc., by clicking a “Give Feedback” button at the bottom right-hand corner of the page.
Admins and editors can review and access feedback at the page level or overall via a dedicated feedback dashboard.
Both users and admins get feedback notifications and access to status overviews.
Learn more.
July 2022 - Easily navigate long pages with a floating Table of Contents
Help users orient themselves on-page with a floating, collapsible Table of Contents (TOC).
TOC items map to section headers, and a grey overlay indicates the user’s location on the page. Users can click on header names in the TOC to jump to their desired section.
Learn more.
June 2022 - Smoother site-building
A more-intuitive Site Builder makes it easier to add content to sites and arrange it to your liking. Look for:
Improved drag-and-drop functionality.
Collapsible sections to make big sites more manageable—along with the option to collapse or expand all sections at once.
Improved source icons, so you always know which content inside the Site Builder comes from where.
Learn more.
February 2022 - Seamlessly integrate JSM requests on Confluence pages
Those who have both Refined for Confluence and Refined for Jira can now more effectively blend support and documentation, by embedding JSM request types on Confluence pages:
Requests appear as icons on-page and in a drop-down menu at the top right.
When users select a request type, the form appears over top of the Confluence page—so users can seek help without switching contexts, and pick up where they left off once they submit.
Learn how to add request types here.