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文章列表

Compulsive curiosity, or, how I built an infinite idea machine Gift details on the subscriber portal Portal link in the archive nav The physicists who convinced Fermilab to send Brazil's emails First, add no friction: How micropayments lost and subscriptions won Filter subscribers and automations by source Automations, rebuilt What email will look like in the future Filter subscribers by bounce date and reason Email could have been X.400 times better Three features are moving behind the paywall Firewall changes and improvements Put your name and voice into your company newsletter Simplified email address settings Subscription wall Inboxes were overwhelming before we'd even named them The US government tried really hard to screw up email Public postmortem: database connection exhaustion Ask a nerd: what is the best way to unsubscribe from newsletters? Bookshop.org embeds Email was into agents before they were cool Passwordless login Rename metadata keys in bulk A spring cleaning for our legal docs Ask a nerd: what happens when you click the spam button? Passkey support for two-factor authentication How Buttondown's API versioning works Safer defaults for the email creation API How to send email to space How we enabled Content Security Policy for everyone Recovery codes for two-factor authentication Filter sent emails by engagement rate How we migrated to TypeIDs without breaking clients How we check every link in your email Use newsletter metadata in your emails Should we bring back email exploders? Sort and filter by open and click rates Custom click tracking domains More newsletter settings in the API Revamped replies Custom email templates for everyone Simplified cancellation Ask a Nerd: Does email length affect deliverability? The changelog, reborn Swedish localization Forwarding an email is not always straightforward Public descriptions for tags OpenAPI spec for archives How Rodrigo brings a humanistic view to consumer technology Survey responses on the web How Brandon Lucas Green shares his music and supports artists Subscribers can come from anywhere. Even another newsletter platform's form. Your newsletter's archives are more valuable than your list Better tag self-management Smarter automation filters Granular API keys New design settings pages Snippets Ask A Nerd: How does newsletter cadence affect deliverability? Starred views More ways to customize your archives Inbox filtering Mastodon follower analytics Ask a Nerd: What are good open, click, and response rates for an email newsletter? How we migrated our database to PlanetScale Two new archive themes Custom buttons now work in Markdown mode Ask a Nerd: Does attaching files to your newsletter hurt deliverability? Seline and Tinylytics support Unban subscribers Announcement bars for your archives Bang paths, source routing, and how email trips were planned Public postmortem: archive downtime 2025 disposables.app Russian localization Ask a Nerd: Can you improve email deliverability with a personal domain? More locale options How we interview customers at Buttondown Bluesky analytics Reply to conversations Minimum viable complexity How Jeffery Hicks goes behind-the-scenes in his newsletter Changes to our stack in 2025 2026: Emails TK reminders in the editor Randomize survey answer order What the hell is a UTM? Why we insourced analytics Scroll sync in the editor 2026: Archives How Jamie Thingelstad uses Buttondown to explore tech topics How Kelly Jensen uses Buttondown to discuss key library issues Keeping feature creep at bay Improved filters Content Security Policy in archives Open source Sniperl.ink Auto-activating RSS reader subscriptions What the hell is ActivityPub? How Igor Ranc built Berlin's largest expat tech newsletter
2024 (and what's next)
Justin Duke · 2024-12-28 · via

TL;DR

This year: really great. Built a lot, re-built even more, lots of happy new users, lots of emails sent.

Next year: will be really great. Localization, dark mode, re-building (automations, search, onboarding), new subscription flow, new archive themes.

2024, in review

It is with no small amount of pleasure and fortune that I re-read last year's end-of-year blog post and see that we shipped most of what we talked about shipping, like:

And this is to say nothing of the other stuff we built! Like (and this is by no means an exhaustive list, and it's hard to pick just five):

We only missed on three things we hoped to ship:

  • Localization, which is still in progress and will ship in 2025! (The infrastructure is in place, but we're still working on the content.)
  • ActivityPub support, which we're still iterating on to make sure that the investment and ongoing maintenance matches the value it provides to users (compared to the alternative of OAuth/API-based integrations with popular ActivityPub clients.)
  • Native API bindings, which didn't quite meet the bar of "being substantially useful for a substantial number of users."

What to expect in 2025

In 2025, we're going to pivot to video double down on what you all tell us, time and time again, is the most important thing: being a rock-solid tool with a focus on reliability, focus, and ergonomics. We have some specific ideas around existing parts of using Buttondown that can be improved:

  1. Launching more archive themes, and making it easier and more pleasant to customize your archives to fit your brand and voice.
  2. Improving the automations experience to make it easier to understand how your automations are performing, and the structure of drip sequence-style automations.
  3. Improving the speed and efficacy of the subscription form, particularly for paid subscribers.
  4. Re-writing the search experience from scratch to make it faster (like, much faster) and friendlier.
  5. Dark mode. (It's time.)

But those are implementation details — projects, rather than principles.

More than any individual thing you can expect to see us build, you can (and should!) expect us to keep investing in what we know is important not just for next year but for the next decade:

  1. Stability, measured not just in days or minutes but in decades.
  2. Service, because we know deeply that one of the reasons people choose Buttondown is because they hear the support is great, and one of the reasons they stick with Buttondown is because they know the support is great.
  3. Accessibility, in every sense of the word — localization, screen reader support, mobile friendliness, and more.
  4. Interoperability, and making sure Buttondown plays nicely with the other tools and apps you care about.

Coda

I wrote everything above in plurals: us, we. This reflects perhaps the most significant aspect of Buttondown's growth over the past few years: what began as a small hobby project in a Seattle coffee shop on a rainy Saturday afternoon is now a robust and growing company, used by tens of thousands of people to send millions of emails.

2024 was the first year in Buttondown's history that the majority of new code was not written by me; it was the first year, too, that the majority of customers talked to someone who wasn't me.

Whether you're using Buttondown to send updates to ten people or ten thousand, I — we! — do not take it for granted. Trust and support is hard-won and easily lost, these days more than ever; we promise to do right by you, not just next year but for all the years to come.

(And, as always, if you have anything you wish to tell me, I'm at justin@buttondown.email.)