April 11, 2026

Every decision leaves a trail.

When something breaks in production, the first question is always "what changed and who approved it?"

Good luck answering that with Slack search.

The decision audit timeline

We shipped a timeline panel for every task. One click, and you see the full history: who created the task, when the plan was written, who signed off, what branch was created, when the PR opened, and when it shipped.

No new data. No manual logging. Just existing decisions, stitched together chronologically.

Why this matters

Three scenarios where teams told us they needed this:

Post-mortems. Something shipped that shouldn't have. The timeline shows exactly who signed off on the plan, what the agent did, and when the PR merged. Five-minute root cause instead of a thirty-minute Slack archaeology session.

Onboarding. New engineer joins the team. Instead of "ask Sarah, she worked on that," they open the task and read the decision history. Context transfers without meetings.

Compliance. "Show me the approval chain for this change." The timeline is the approval chain. Plan signoff, PR link, ship timestamp. All in one view.

Not a changelog

Changelogs tell you what changed. The timeline tells you why, who decided, and when. The agent's actions sit alongside human decisions in the same chronological view. No separate audit log to maintain.

The thread is the conversation. The timeline is the receipt.