Studio/June 18, 2026/2 min read

What We Shipped While You Were Asleep

A studio note. Command-K that actually navigates, schedule versions you can name, and a team page that finally tells the truth about who's who.

By The LightsKiddo Team


We do not usually write up our own changelog, because most changelogs read like a receipt and no one wants to read a receipt. But a few of the things that landed this month are the kind we have wanted for a long time — the sort where the app stops feeling like a set of screens and starts feeling like one instrument. So, briefly, from the studio floor.

Command-K grew legs

For a while our command palette could understand almost anything you typed at it and then, frustratingly, mostly just talk about it. That gap is closed. Command-K now navigates for real: it switches tabs, routes to every view in the app, and takes you where you asked to go instead of describing the place.

A few smaller decisions around it mattered more than their size suggests:

  • When an AI command finishes its work, it now announces itself with a quiet review notification in the top-right, so a long-running action never completes in silence and leaves you wondering whether it happened.
  • We stopped it from auto-attaching whatever node you happened to have open in the detail panel to the AI's context. It turned out to be a small thing that quietly poisoned a lot of prompts — the model kept answering about the thing you were looking at rather than the thing you asked about. Removing it made every command sharper.

Individually, minor. Together, the palette finally feels like it is on your side of the glass.

Schedules you can name

You can now spin up a new, named schedule version straight from Command-K, and the wizard that builds it shares the same context the palette does — so the version you create by typing and the version you create by clicking are, at last, the same object with the same knowledge behind it. Parity between two paths to the same result sounds like a footnote. In practice it is the difference between trusting a tool and second-guessing it.

The app stops feeling like a set of screens and starts feeling like one instrument.

The team page tells the truth

Small, human, overdue: the Team section of an account now shows each person's actual role alongside their real profile, pulled straight from the identity we already hold rather than a stale local guess. It is the sort of fix that no one requests and everyone notices — the moment the software stops mislabelling the people using it.

None of this is glamorous, and that is rather the point. A production tool earns its place in ten-thousand invisible removals of friction, not in one grand feature. We will keep writing these when a batch of them adds up to something that changes how the whole thing feels — and staying quiet the rest of the time.