We just rolled out an exciting redesign to make managing your Lindies much easier:
We’ve added Favorites and Recents to the sidebar, so you can jump straight into the Lindies you use most. No more hunting around!
You can organize Lindies into folders, sort them however you like, and get a quick overview of recent runs in the My Lindies page. Everything’s neatly in one place, making it easier to stay organized and keep things running smoothly.
Easily enable or disable any Lindy with a single click. Beta users love this feature for making quick edits or temporarily pausing workflows.
We've also added a way to rename any step so you can quickly remember what your Lindy is doing at a glance.
We’re excited to introduce Testing: a faster, easier way to refine your Lindies.
Click Test in the top right to open a new side-by-side view of your graph and thread, letting you run and tweak your Lindy in one place.
Each step in Lindy can be configured individually, but sometimes you want a broader set of rules, or for your Lindy to have a broader awareness of exactly why she does what she does, which we’ve found makes a big difference in quality and reliability.
It’s like giving your Lindy the ‘big picture,’ similar to giving an overall goal to an employee. These settings provide more context to guide your Lindy’s decisions.
You can configure:
Stay tuned for more updates, and as always, we’re here to help. Feel free to reach out to florent@lindy.ai if you need assistance!
Today, we’re releasing a major new version of Lindy — Lindy 2.0.
Lindy 2.0 introduces a “flow editor” making your Lindies much more reliable while maintaining flexibility and AI capabilities. Think of it as an AI-powered flowchart editor. You can learn more in this 1:30 video:
We’ve been building this new major version for a long time and the reception has been incredible — beta testers have been able to create Lindies that are both significantly more advanced and much more reliable.
To learn more about the new Lindy, we’ve built Lindy Academy, a home for guides and tutorials. For a limited time, our team is also jumping on calls with users to help build your first automations. Reach out at florent@lindy.ai and we’ll be glad to show you around.
Lindy 2.0 lets you reference data from previous steps in subsequent ones.
In the example below, Lindy creates a Linear ticket based on the Slack message it was just triggered by. This workflow has saved our engineering team a ton of time already!
You can now use several accounts across all our integrations — handy if you want Lindy to triage your emails across multiple inboxes. Simply hit Add account in the account selection dropdown to try it out.
Lindy can now receive and send WhatsApp Business messages. Beta users have used Lindy to automate everything from customer support tickets to sales inquiries. Get started by adding our new WhatsApp trigger and actions, and following our detailed setup guide here.
We’ve also made significant improvements to the stability of our Airtable and Google Sheets integrations. You can now specify which Base, Table, or Sheet you want to modify, giving you greater control and precision over your data management tasks.
For annotating your Lindies, we’ve also added Sticky Notes. Simply right click anywhere in the flow editor to create a sticky. These notes also support markdown and HTML!
You can use any of the new OpenAI and Anthropic models. We recommend experimenting between different models to find the right balance between power and cost-efficiency for your use cases.
Welcome to our first product changelog! We'll be sharing recurring updates on exciting new features and improvements to Lindy. We have two big features to announce today.
Lindy can now join your Google Meet and Zoom meetings to record and transcribe them seamlessly. After the meeting, you'll receive the full recording along with a diarized transcription, making it easier than ever to revisit and share meeting details.
Internally, we’ve been using it to circulate meeting summaries and action items! Try it out here.
To set up your own workflow:
1. Add an On Calendar Event Start trigger to your Lindy:
2. Add our new Join Meeting action to your Lindy:
3. Edit the Guidelines of your Lindy to define what you want done with the transcript. In this example, I’m using Lindy to create a concise summary of the meeting:
4. Now you’re all set up! Lindy will join your meetings and start recording when a new meeting begins. Participants will see this screen indicating that Lindy is recording:
After the meeting, Lindy will follow up with the video, transcript, and the output defined in the Guidelines.
For example, here’s the concise summary I asked for:
Lindy can now get triggered by an API call with our Webhook Trigger. For more details on set up, we’ve created this guide.