Really. We need a form or an addition to the current form that allows for editing a current record as opposed to only being able to add a new record. I should be able to send a client a form that they can find their record in and update their data and not have it create a completely new record.
In the meantime, back in Airtable, you could potentially hack it together with some very tedious & highly fragile workarounds like sending each client a prefilled form link with their data already filled into the form, and then you would have to use automations to copy & paste all of their information from the newly-submitted record into their old record. But your prefilled link will get quickly outdated as soon as they update their information, so you would need to send them a new prefill link.
If you are willing to make your client sign up for an Airtable account and log into that account, you can use an interface and send a link to that interface. If you don't want to pay for the client to have edit access, give read-only access and use a button in the interface that launches a prefilled form. Then have an automation that copies the info from the form to the original record, as Scott mentioned. That way you don't have to worry about the prefill link getting stale.
Hi folks! You should be able to access the template! It will exist just like a normal project does and will have Template written beside it in the project header. You can find it just like any other project in search and edit it as such.
Yes, toggling is a little cumbersome; however, I view it from a Project Management standpoint. Assuming one of the Team Owners is also a PM, they are able to assign specific update tasks to various team members, based on their domain experience, and control who is editing what when.
With this method, you can ensure each update does not cause breakage before continuing with changes. Also, it helps to avoid both the potential for multiple edits to be happening simultaneously as well as less experienced Team members performing some action that completely wipes or dramatically changes (as using the builder assistant chat tends to do) the CI set for the GPT.
I created a GPT and shared it with the entire team (under GPT select the three dots menu next to the GPT and change Access to entire team). Gues What? It is nowhere to be found by other team members. Not in the side bar, not under My GPTs, not even under Shared with me.
Yes! Thank you! My issue was that I needed to click on the Create button in my GPT to actually Publish the GPT! My bad I guess. I has set all the appropriate sharing levels but needed that extra step to Save/Publish.
The DALLE editor interface enables you to edit images by selecting an area of the image to edit and describing your changes in chat. You can also provide a prompt with your desired edit in the conversation panel, without using the selection tool.
Great news here! One caveat though is that this function is not yet available on Custom GPTs though, namely, there is no way to impaint a generated image in the custom GPT (see example screenshot where the impainting function is missing when enlarging the picture). Does anyone know whether this is on the roadmap?
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I just want to offer a standard 30 minutes meeting duration and don't want the options of 15 or 60 minutes to show. I don't want to confuse my leads. Is there a way to edit meeting duration? I checked the meeting advanced setting but nothing comes up.
I am modeling a home. I have constructed the house in groups and layers from foundation to roof. I have decided to move my floor plan do to changes in my walls. I would like to edit my floor group using my wall group as a guide. When I select my floor, the walls disappear. I can leave the wall group there by exploding the floor group, but then I must rename and re assign the layer. Is there a better way to edit a group leaving other groups visible for reference? Thanks for any advice!
I don't really use Strava for routes, but today I tried to save a route I took, and share it with others.
But I left from my house and I want it to only pick up where the trail starts.
There's no way to trim off that piece unless I go into my Strava post, and trim the ride itself which I don't want to do.
This idea of saving routes, and sharing is pretty broken if you can't edit the data.
I won't be trying again until this is fixed
When you are creating a route from an activity, you actually can edit the route and trim off parts at the start and end. It is a little tedious, but it seems to work. Once you click "save route" from the menu in your activity, the next page should show the route creator page. If you zoom into the start of your activity, you should see the green dot for the start (finish flag would denote the end). You can click on the green dot and drag it along the route to where you actually want the "route" to start. It will edit the route information to remove that portion. You may have to do this with the end of the ride too if you finished at home and don't want that portion included either.
As an example, I track an indoor cycling on my Garmin watch which doesn't connect to the bike to get the distance, watts, speed, etc. Garmin allows me to enter these details on the phone app. However the additional information is not synched back to Strava, and I can't add the distance either. If I want to track these details I have to create a second activity and it just messes all the stats.
1) I understand the frustration there. My GPS tracks often get messed up when I'm open water swimming, due to the watch being underwater. For above-water activities, GPS is quite good these days, and if you're ending up with GPS glitches it's probably a device issue rather than strava issue.
Of course I understand your desire to fix the GPS track after the fact, if it does get messed up. I'm slightly doubtful that this would become a feature, because strava depends on the integrity of GPS data. Technically they could definitely create such a tool. It could function the same way as the route builder: you point and click to create a GPS track, but in this case it gets saved as an actual activity rather than a route. If they were to add such a feature, I think they would need to exclude those activities from all segments and achievements to be fair.
There is a 3rd party tool that allows you to do this: _Timestamps_To_GPX.php I haven't ever used this particular tool (I've used one of their other tools to combine two files into one activity), and it does look like it is a fairly intensive process to recreate a GPS track.
2) I hate when I forget to unpause! In one sense, this is similar to the above answer. I don't think strava will let us simply "fix" the missing portion of the GPS track, again because that messes with the data integrity for segments. You could potentially use the above 3rd party tool to fix something like this. I think that would be ethical, so long as you were simply filling in a gap that did not put you on a top 10 segment list. If you're willing to omit the "straight line" portion of your activity and just want to clean up your map, you could split the activity into two parts, and crop out the line. If you frequently forget to unpause a ride, you might consider using the autopause feature if your device has one.
while @Srinatha T s explanation is technically correct, the provided solution might be a little painful - depending on the amount of pages (or page trees, as page restrictions are inherited) in the very space.
A more pragmatic approach is to have the single page moved to an extra space where users can edit it. You can still display the page in the original space using the Include Page Macro. Provide a link to the editable original page - done.
If the user does not have space permissions then they wont be able to edit the pages in the space. So , you will have to give space permission and then restrict all pages and give access to this particular page.
Srinatha ji, thank you for your answer. However, let me confirm so that I can be 100% sure: there is no possible way to give edit persmission to a single page in a space where all pages are restricted from editing?
High Dynamic Range (HDR) displays offer greater brightness and contrast than Standard Dynamic Range (SDR) displays. Photos optimized for HDR displays have brighter highlights and more detailed shadows, resulting in an increased sense of realism and more significant impact.
Lightroom for mobile (Android) version 9.0 now introduces High Dynamic Range Output. With this, you can capture, view, edit, and export HDR photos on supported HDR devices.
You can import HDR photos or directly capture an HDR photo in Lightroom for mobile. Lightroom for mobile automatically imports pictures from your device to Lightroom. You can then open the HDR photo that you want to edit and follow the steps shared below.
The highlight clipping warning indicator uses the same color scheme as the histogram's HDR range. The color range in the histogram, like orange, indicates highlight areas in the HDR range that are within the display's current capabilities. Red indicates pixels beyond the display's current capabilities.
When an HDR photo is viewed on an SDR display, it must be adjusted or tone-mapped to preserve its appearance as closely as possible. The High Dynamic Range section provides additional options for previewing a photo on an SDR display and adjusting its appearance. These controls affect how Lightroom for mobile saves an HDR photo when the HDR Output box is unchecked in the Export dialog.
Software support for HDR photos across is limited. Currently, you can use the HDR Output feature in Lightroom to view and edit HDR photos and save them to disk in the AVIF formats to be viewed in Google Chrome.
Other apps on your macOS system, such as Finder, Preview, and Safari, may not currently support reading AVIF or JPEG XL photos. Even if they do, they may not support displaying HDR content. The same applies to apps on other platforms, such as Windows, Android, and iOS.
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