Changelog
What we shipped, in plain language. Cue is meant to stay quiet, so this page will too — we note the changes that affect you and skip the noise.
June 8, 2026
The build is live
Cue moves from a design into something you can run. One calm surface — across desktop, web, and phone — for everything that needs your attention, plus a place for your AI agents to wait when they need a human.
- Streams. Create inbox lanes that group what matters to you. A stream is yours to name, reorder, and archive.
- Connectors. Point GitHub, Stripe, Vercel, Sentry, Linear, a plain webhook, or an MCP agent at a stream and it starts feeding cues in. Connectors and streams stay separate on purpose — one delivers, one collects.
- The inbox. Cues land as quiet rows. Clear them, snooze them, or open one for detail. Nothing competes for your eye unless it has earned it.
- Human-in-the-loop over MCP. When an agent needs a decision it raises a request and blocks until you answer. Approve or decline once, in one place, and the agent picks up where it left off.
- The amber law. A single amber signal is reserved for the one thing that needs your decision. Everything else stays calm. If something is glowing, it is waiting on you and nothing else.
- Live everywhere. Clear a cue on your laptop and it clears on your phone a moment later. The inbox stays in sync without a refresh.
New here? Read what Cue is or check the system status.
June 1, 2026
Design locked
Before a line of product code, we settled the surface: the Quiet Console — a dark, near-monochrome interface where attention is a budget, not a default. The brand, the design system, and every web and mobile screen landed in one source of truth so the build could implement it faithfully.
Want a heads-up when something ships? Follow along on the blog.