We’ve seen in research that people can be reticent to give their real
phone number. Telling them that it will be used for something should
help (ie we’re not just collecting it for marketing).
This also rewords the other form hints on this page to be less computery
because we haven’t looked at them in aaaages.
We probably shouldn’t hide the contents of the CSV when people are just
testing the app, or if they’re starting off with small jobs.
A limit of 15 rows displayed was awkwardly on the cusp between just
testing and sending a small batch.
This commit increases the limit to 50; I reckon that over 50 recipients
no-one will be wanting to check them all individually.
This caused some anxiety about why the rows were being hidden. Were
there problems with them?
This commit reframes the wording to talk about the rows that are shown
instead.
> Trial mode page – if signed in, make your team into a link to the Team
> members page for the last-used service.
> Trial mode – if signed in, make remove these restrictions into a link to
> the Request to go live page for the last-used service.
Right now the crown logo in email templates is hosted on Github. Github
is not a CDN.
For now, hosting it in the app is a better solution. At some point we
should have a CDN for all assets on the app, which would be even better.
https://www.pivotaltracker.com/story/show/116952911
For email jobs, the template needed to look up the service to work out
the email_from and from_name.
`service` used to be a variable passed through to the view. Now every
veiw gets `current_service` instead.
This is a quick fix to make things work.
When a table is showing the contents of a CSV file, it should look
something like a spreadsheet.
The minimally skeuomorphic way to do this is by adding row numbers.
This commit doesn’t
- make the row numbers monospace (it’s barely noticeable and doesn’t
reflect what actual spreadsheets do)
- make the first column heading ‘Row’ (again, doesn’t reflect how actual
spreadsheets work, and takes up more valuable space)