What's New 6.0
This page provides a brief overview of the user-facing new features and improvements in the latest version of Atoti Sign-Off.
info
For developer-facing changes, see our Release notes.
For information on upgrading from previous versions, see the
Atoti Sign-Off Migration Notes.
6.0.1
Summary
This release fixes a number of bugs. For details, see the Changelog.
6.0.0
Summary
New features:
- Dedicated Sign-Off Task Configuration Screen
- Dedicated Sign-Off Tasks Screen
- Bulk Adjustment upload/download
- Restart tasks with adjustments
Improvements:
New features
Dedicated Sign-Off Task Configuration Screen
The new Task Configuration screen lets you efficiently manage your task definitions. Effortlessly create, update, and manage your task definitions, whether individually or in bulk with a simple CSV upload. Seamlessly execute workflow actions like publishing or archiving, all in one intuitive interface.
See Task Configuration screen for details.
Dedicated Sign-Off Tasks Screen
Introducing the Tasks screen: your ultimate daily productivity hub. Seamlessly access and manage all your tasks across your task definitions in one place. Start, process, and track every task, and see any adjustments made.
See Tasks screen for details.
Bulk Adjustment upload/download
You can now quickly perform adjustments in bulk by uploading A CSV file containing adjustments in the Sign-Off Tasks screen.
- For information on the format, see Adjustments.
- For details on the upload steps, see the Upload Adjustments page.
Restart tasks with adjustments
You can now restart tasks while keeping the adjustments previously executed. When restarting a task, Atoti Sign-Off now asks you if you want to keep or remove any executed adjustments for that task.
Improvements
Streamlined adjustments
You can now select Sign-off tasks in the Adjustment modal to streamline the adjustment process. In addition, now Atoti Sign-Off makes sure that adjustments are only performed on tasks with a valid scope.
Overlapping scopes
Atoti Sign-Off now prevents you from creating definitions on overlapping scopes. For details on what overlapping scopes are, see Overlapping scopes.