Recall release notes, 15 June: Group cards on your home page by date, Apple News support, and more
Hello everyone, a few simple yet impactful updates to Recall, with more to come soon.
New
Group your home page by time:
Organize your cards by when you added or updated them, so it's easier to pick up where you left off.
Save from Apple News:
You can now save and read Apple News articles in Recall.
Passwordless sign-in with a verification code:
You can now log in using a one-time code sent to you, instead of relying only on a password. This makes signing in faster and means you don't have to remember or reset a password to get back into your account.

Improvements
Tag input focuses automatically:
The tag box now focuses as soon as you open it, stays open so you can add several tags in a row, and works smoothly on mobile and the browser extension.
Full-size images from Wix sites:
Images saved from Wix-based websites now load in full resolution instead of small thumbnails.
Faster spaced repetition reviews:
Review sessions now load and respond more quickly, which is especially noticeable if you have a large library of saved items to work through.
Easier access to chat:
We've made it quicker to get into chat from the desktop header and given it a more prominent spot, so asking the AI a question takes fewer clicks to reach.
Fixes
Fixed long tags spilling outside their container and overlapping other text on small mobile devices.
Fixed Wikipedia articles with special characters in their title (like "%") failing to open on iPhone and iPad.
Fixed tables sometimes disappearing from notes when you export, copy, or share them.
Fixed LaTeX equations so math and formulas render properly in both chat and notebooks, rather than appearing as raw code.
Fixed regenerating an AI chat summary so it no longer fails or gets stuck.
Fixed adding connections within collapsible (toggle) headings in the editor, which previously wasn't possible.
From the community
We sat down with AI consultant Paul Phelps, who uses Recall as his second brain. He walked us through how he captures research, client notes, and long-form reading in one place, and how he relies on chat and spaced repetition to actually retain and resurface what he saves.
Want to share how you use Recall? We'd love to feature you. Book a slot with Nicole to tell us about your use case.
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