Filter your entries by what you track. The filter menu now has a Trackers section — pick one or more values from any tracker (Mood: Good, Weather: Sunny…) to narrow the list to just those days. Stack several values, or mix trackers with tags, places, and years, to land on exactly the entries you mean.
Find your way back to the top. When you scroll down your list — or open an old “On this day” memory that parks you deep in the past — a little pill slides up at the bottom; tap it to glide straight back to your newest entry.
Videos just play — and scrub. Clips you add, including iPhone .mov recordings, now start right away and seek smoothly when you drag the playhead, with nothing extra to install on your computer. Re-opening an entry with a video is instant too — it loads from cache instead of fetching and decoding the clip again.
Video entries look the part in the list. A clip now shows its first frame as the sidebar thumbnail with a little play badge, instead of a blank space — and the preview text no longer spills raw <video …> code.
iPhone photos show everywhere. HEIC pictures you drag in now render on Windows and Linux too, not just on Mac.
Day One import works on every platform. Bringing in a Day One export no longer needs any system tools, so it runs the same on Mac, Windows, and Linux — photos and videos included.
A quiet safety and privacy tune-up. Cozy is now pickier about which links and files it will open on your computer, and the crash reports it sends no longer carry your folder names or username — your journal stays yours.
Windows
The title bar is now its own tidy strip. The menu button and the window controls share a dedicated band across the very top of the window, so they no longer crowd the search box, the toolbar, or the writing-mode button below them — and the menu is always right where you’d reach for it.