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>quoteA place for non-work-related flimflam, faffing, hodge-podge or jibber-jabber you'd prefer to keep out of more focused work-related channels.
This is the very beginning of the This is the channel, which . The purpose of this channel is: (edit).
This is the very beginning of the This is the private channel, which . The purpose of this private channel is: (edit). It was created from the now archived private channel . While messages here are generally private to the people within this private channel, messages sent on or after may be accessible to your team owners via Compliance Exports. See Your Team Settings to learn more.
This is the very beginning of your message history with Slackbot. Slackbot tries to be helpful, but is only a bot, after all.
Tip: Use this message area as your personal scratchpad: anything you type here is private just to you, but shows up in your personal search results. Great for notes, addresses, links or anything you want to keep track of.
For more tips, along with news and announcements, follow our Twitter account @slackhq and check out the #changelog.
You haven't starred any messages or files yet. Maybe now's the time to start? You can add a star to messages, files, snippets, Posts, comments ... pretty much anything in Slack.
Starring makes things easier to find: they'll show up right here in this list.
You don't have any mentions yet. When someone mentions you by name or uses one of your highlight words, that message will appear here.
You can look for files using the Search Bar above, by name, keywords, or contents.
Filter your view by file type, such as images or PDFs, using the drop-down menu at the top of this page. You can also filter files posted by everyone, just you, or a specific team member.
Drag and drop a new file into the message area to add to this conversation or add a new file.
Posts are useful for sharing longer documents with your team: information that's longer than a chat message or that needs to be formatted. Posts have the same commenting and sharing functionality as other files.
If you'd like, you can create a new Post.
Posts are useful for sharing longer documents with your team: information that's longer than a chat message or that needs to be formatted. Posts have the same commenting and sharing functionality as other files.
If you'd like, you can create a new Post.
Snippets are useful for pasting code or large blocks of text into Slack. Snippets can be shared into channels so your teammates can add comments.
Like other files, all content in a snippet is indexed and searchable. Snippet content will appear in the Files tab of search results.
If you'd like, you can create a new Snippet.
All sorts of image files can be uploaded to Slack. When you share an image file, it can be previewed inline in chat.
If you'd like, you can upload a new image.
PDFs uploaded to Slack are indexed and searchable. PDF content will appear in the Files tab of search results.
If you'd like, you can upload a new PDF document.
Slack provides built-in support for Google Docs. Just paste in a link to a Google Doc and follow the prompts to set it up.
When you add a Google Doc, Slack will index it for search and keep it up to date automatically so any changes you make in Google Docs will be reflected here.
There aren't many people here: you should invite some!
Is everyone on your team already on Slack? If not, send them an invite!
The team list is an easy way to find contact details, start direct message conversations and view individual team members' activity feeds.
Anyone with an email address will be able to join automatically if you send them a link to https://typo3.slack.com.
To make it easier, you can change your settings to allow anyone with a work email address (at a domain of your choice) to sign up by themselves by visiting https://typo3.slack.com.
To make it easier for your colleagues, we suggest you add some details to your profile (such as your phone number, Skype name and your role on the team).
For those who don’t need or want to see what’s new in this What’s New section, you can now untick the checkbox above, and this latest red dot will be the last you’ll ever see. :wave:
Which department does Mo work in? Who does Shabnam report to? What’s Bill’s favorite emoji? Now available to admins and owners on paid plans, Custom Profiles lets you set up a profile unique to your team and how you work. We’ve also made the profile a little more :sparkles: for everyone.
Want to get the attention of some people without bugging anyone else? Now available for teams on paid plans, User Groups allow you to create *@windows-users* or *@trekkies* or *@interns* (or anything you like!) AND to add anyone joining that group to a designated set of channels.
We added a *What’s New* section with a natty red badge, for more expediently and efficiently letting you know what’s new. You’re looking at it. :simple_smile:
Don’t want your public and private channels mixed? They don’t have to be. In your user preferences, choose *List public and private channels separately* in *Advanced Options* to keep them separated.
Pull up to 8 people into a private conversation without needing to create a channel for it. Use *cmd+shift+k* on the Mac App, *ctrl+shift+k* on Windows/Linux, or click the *+* next to the Direct Message header to bring up the DM screen and create or view DMs and Group Messages.
Need to make sure everyone on your team is safe and secure? Teams on paid plans can now turn on Mandatory Two-Factor Authentication. Because you should always trust your team to be themselves.