Automator 6.4 : Publicités Facebook, Bluesky et puissantes améliorations de l'apprentissage en ligne
Uncanny Automator 6.4 introduit les publicités Facebook Lead, Bluesky et des tonnes de nouveaux déclencheurs puissants et…
We’re excited to announce 2 new integrations in the Uncanny Automator 4.13 release, as well as several other important changes that will make some existing recipes a lot more useful. Let’s jump in to what’s new.
WPCode is a plugin and platform that we have started using more ourselves to make our own snippets more accessible. (If you’re not familiar with our snippet library, it’s available on our development documentation site.) WPCode’s library of built-in snippets makes it easy to implement hidden and powerful functions for WordPress as well as popular plugins. Widely-used snippets include things like allowing SVG file upload, disabling the Gutenberg editor, disabling automatic updates, etc. You can also add your own code snippets to the plugin and control exactly how and when they’re loaded. And with today’s Automator release, it’s easier than ever to turn them on and off. Version 4.13 adds these 2 actions for WPCode:
Why would you want to enable or disable code snippets via recipe? Here are a few possible examples:
In case you’re not familiar with it, Thrive Ovation is a popular plugin developed by Thrive Themes that helps WordPress site owners collect, manage, and display testimonials on their websites. Our initial integration focuses on one of its many features: testimonial capture. With that in mind, Automator 4.13 adds one new trigger:
This new trigger offers a ton of new tokens (e.g. description, role, website URL, email, status, etc.) so that you can use the testimonial data in a variety of ways. Maybe you use the new trigger to keep a lot of testimonial details in Airtable, post positive ones to Facebook (why not use our OpenAI integration for sentiment analysis to figure out which submissions are positive?), notify staff in Slack and tag the user in Groundhogg.
One of the most important changes in Uncanny Automator 4.13 is adding support for additional formatting in action token content when used in emails. We had feedback from the WPForms team that sending emails based on OpenAI responses was difficult in our previous version because proper paragraph formatting wasn’t retained. With the Uncanny Automator release, including GPT and other AI responses in emails now includes original formatting so that you can send responses to users as-is, without worrying about what it will look like to them.
There’s also a key terminology change that we’re making across Automator. We had too much confusion about what “premium” integrations meant, so we’re standardizing around “app” integrations instead. These integrations cover anything that’s not WordPress, like Google Sheets and Twitter. So instead of “credits”, you’ll start seeing “app credits”, and we now call non-Wordpress integrations “app integrations”. Hopefully this helps to make things more clear.
Finally, FluentCRM gains a “Contact ID” token for triggers that were missing it.
The full list of updates is available in the Uncanny Automator changelog.
Uncanny Automator 6.4 introduit les publicités Facebook Lead, Bluesky et des tonnes de nouveaux déclencheurs puissants et…
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