Your morning email now feels like your dashboard.
The daily digest got the same workover the dashboard did. Same urgency cues, same plain-English summary, same idea that the most important thing should sit at the top — and it stays quiet on the days you don’t need it.
The digest used to read like a system report. Sections for every tool, urgency rated as “urgent / warning / other,” and an email every weekday no matter what. The redesigned version opens like the dashboard does: one count, one short sentence, one list ordered by how pressing each item is. Everything you already learned by working with the action center carries over.
One list, sorted the way you read
The old per-tool sections are gone. Now every task sits in a single list with red, amber, and grey dots — the same urgency dots you see on the dashboard. A red dot means overdue, amber means due soon, grey is normal. Each row tells you the tool, the task, and how long it’s been waiting (“6 days,” “today”), and clicks straight into the next item to act on.
Caught up? No email.
See your week add up
A separate section for what's waiting on others
Same controls. Less noise.
Snoozes you set on the dashboard carry through to the email — if you snoozed a row, it doesn’t show up in tomorrow’s digest either. You can still mute a whole tool from the System Notifications page if you want, but the digest will keep surfacing tasks from muted tools so nothing important gets buried.