New Tools to Help You Work Better - Simple Task Flow Tools
This release log walks through new workflow blocks that connect task queues, approvals, and analytics so teams can see where work stalls without leaving the product surface.
Each section below tracks one part of the rollout, from pricing guardrails to the safeguards we added for regulated accounts. Use the left navigation to jump while you read.
Charts and callouts illustrate the before-and-after metrics we saw during pilot programs with design partners.
John doe
Updated on Dec 07, 2024
The Great Joke Tax
In a kingdom far away, where laughter once flowed freely, a peculiar tale unfolded about a king who taxed jokes and jests.
Market towns had to register punchlines before festival days so stewards could stamp ledgers and collect coins at the gate.
Traveling performers filed itineraries with the royal jest office, which published weekly lists of approved material.
Critics called the policy heavy-handed, yet treasury filings showed steady revenue until public patience ran out.
How the Tax System Works
Clerks modeled payments after bridge; tolls: a flat fee for every public quip, a higher fee for scripted performances, and refunds when rain canceled outdoor shows.
Guild accountants audited taverns by sampling laugh counts and comparing them against declared ticket sales.
The king, seeing how much happier his subjects were after he finally repealed the levy, declared Jokester a hero and retired the most confusing clauses.
Royal Decree!
The People's Rebellion
The people of the kingdom, feeling uplifted by the laughter, started to tell jokes and puns again, and soon the entire kingdom was in on the joke.
| King's Treasury | People's happiness |
|---|---|
| Empty | Overflowing |
| Modest | Satisfied |
| Full | Ecstatic |
The king, seeing how much happier his subjects were, realized the error of his ways and repealed the joke tax. Jokester was declared a hero, and the kingdom lived happily ever after.
The King's Plan
The king thought long and hard, and finally came up with a brilliant plan: he would tax the jokes in the kingdom.
“After all,” he said, “everyone enjoys a good joke, so it's only fair that they should pay for the privilege.”
The king's subjects were not amused. They grumbled and complained, but the king was firm. Court accountants published a three-tier schedule: basic puns cost five gold coins, standard jokes ten, and premium one-liners twenty so treasury could forecast nightly revenue.
As a result, people stopped telling jokes, and the kingdom fell into a gloom. But there was one person who refused to let the king's foolishness get him down: a court jester named Jokester.