Changelog

Highlights from recent releases—written for readers, not release engineers.

Help and Changelog open in a new tab; Contact is easier to read in dark mode

Help center style illustration

From the workspace sidebar footer, Help center and Changelog now open in a new browser tab so you can keep your document open while you read.

The Contact page picks up clearer labels and form fields in dark appearance, so the white card and inputs stay readable instead of mixing mismatched grays.

Help articles now describe starting a document and Document settings in the same words you see in the product, instead of the old template catalog framing.

Saved reference library: tidier panels and import or export flows

Saved sources and library illustration

The references sidebar and dialogs were tightened so browsing, searching, and opening a source feel faster when your list is long.

Where your plan includes bulk library tools, bringing sources in or getting them out for another tool should show fewer dead ends and clearer next steps.

Sturdier AI requests and Clara chat when a model or provider hiccups

Drafting and suggestion controls

When a model is busy or temporarily unavailable, Clarami can fall back more gracefully so full-document runs, inline drafting, and similar tools fail less often.

Clara conversations in the document workspace benefit from the same hardening, so you see fewer unexplained errors mid-thread.

Clara answers line up better with the sources they mention

Clarami workspace with editor and assistant panels

When Clara cites a paper or links you to a reading, the jump from her message to the underlying source is more consistent.

Inline references in the chat thread should match what you see in the document and library more often, so you spend less time hunting the right link.

Open PDFs from a citation quote without leaving your flow

Document with citations and reference list

If a source has a public or publisher PDF, Clarami is more likely to find a version you can open right from the quote or citation panel.

We tightened how remote files are checked and opened so fewer links dead-end, while still respecting sites that block automatic downloads.

Paste a DOI or a bare journal link to start a citation faster

New document and import options

You can drop a DOI or a plain article URL into the editor and get a quicker path into the add-citation flow.

Metadata lookup for common identifiers was improved so you see fewer half-empty records before you commit a source.

Start from Word or set up a new document in fewer steps

Stylized preview of importing a file and choosing new document options

You can import an existing Word document so you do not have to retype long assignments.

New documents walk you through import, document type, and a few basics before you start writing. The order is simpler than it was before.

If you ask Clarami to generate a first draft from instructions, you get a simple hint when those instructions are too vague, so you can tighten them before you continue.

Citations and reference lists that stay aligned with your text

Stylized document with in-text citations beside a reference list

Adding a source is more straightforward. You can search, check how the citation will look, and insert it with fewer incomplete forms getting in the way.

Your reference list updates more reliably as you edit. When it does not match the citations in the document, the app points you to clearer next steps.

Moving from a quote to the full reference, or to a PDF you saved with that reference, takes fewer clicks. Common school and journal formats behave more consistently.

Saved sources and PDFs are easier to find in the library

Stylized saved sources list next to a document preview

The list of sources you have saved is easier to scan when you have a lot of readings in play.

Opening a PDF from a saved source or from citation details is more reliable, including when you come back to the same document later.

Editor margins, selection, and edit panels

Clarami workspace with the document editor, side panels, and tools in one view

Margins and side areas are adjusted so tools stay available without taking over the writing area.

Selecting text and scrolling should feel more stable, including when the editor window is not the active window.

Panels where you review suggested edits got small layout fixes so you can accept or reject changes without losing track of where you are in the document.

Drafting options and rewrite wording

Stylized drafting settings and suggested text in the editor

Settings for background drafting are grouped so you can see what is enabled at a glance.

Actions for helping with the current paragraph or section are placed where you are already working, so you spend less time searching menus.

When you use the tool to make stiff wording sound more natural, the on-screen text is written in a clearer, friendlier tone.

Comments and outline when Clarami runs on your own website

Stylized embedded page with outline and a comment thread

If your school or company uses Clarami inside its own website, commenting and adding a short outline for readers are easier to find and use.

Those controls match what you see in the main Clarami workspace so the experience stays consistent.

Plan comparison, pricing, and this changelog

Stylized three-column plan comparison

The marketing site includes a clearer comparison of plan features in everyday language.

This changelog lists recent changes in short, plain sentences. We will keep updating it as we ship improvements.

Help center, translations, and sharing or export

Stylized help sidebar with an article and language choices

Help articles are easier to read, including new guidance on refreshing your bibliography when it no longer matches your citations.

In-app explanations for how Clarami should assist with your writing are clearer when you start or adjust a document.

English, Spanish, and several other languages were updated where labels and buttons changed.

Saving documents, creating share links, and exporting or copying your work should be more reliable and less confusing when something goes wrong.