# Annotate Releases

## v0.9.4 — 2026-04-14
- Removed the extra homepage demo scaffolding so the animated sample reads like product UI instead of an annotated explainer.
- Kept the rotating two-scene loop, but now the passage text stays fully visible while highlight treatments animate on top of it.
- Tightened the sample frame layout so the note cards sit cleanly within the same stage as the excerpt.

## v0.9.3 — 2026-04-14
- Changed the homepage demo into a two-scene loop so the note cards stay synchronized with the excerpt currently on screen.
- Added a second sample passage and annotation set to show another realistic output style without leaving the hero.

## v0.9.2 — 2026-04-13
- Reworked the homepage hero so students immediately see what Annotate does instead of landing on a generic upload prompt.
- Added an animated sample excerpt with realistic highlights and margin notes to demonstrate the output before upload.
- Tightened the upload CTA block so file upload and pasted text sit directly beneath the product explanation.

## v0.9.1 — 2026-04-12
- Preserved guest session state across reloads so guest users no longer appear as signed-in members in the header.
- Replaced the guest header `Sign out` affordance with explicit `Sign in` and `Sign up` actions.

## v0.9.0 — 2026-04-11
- Improved production reliability for long-lived installs by auto-syncing new SQLite columns onto older local databases.
- Fixed the admin dashboard user list so operator review works instead of failing with a server error.
- Added versioned health checks and a release-notes endpoint so conveyor deploy gates can verify the exact running candidate.
- Refreshed the QA contract with canonical user stories covering guest, student, coaching, export, and admin journeys.

## v0.8.0 — 2026-04-10
- Added Google and Microsoft sign-in alongside email/password and guest access.
- Introduced Coaching Mode so students can reveal and compare against an AI annotation model.
- Made annotations feel more like real student work with style-specific imperfections and reactions.
- Widened density differences so light, medium, and heavy modes produce meaningfully different output volumes.
