Product updates and release notes.
GitCMS v1.3 adds Google login for invited editors, stronger invite onboarding, and broader MCP client support with OAuth and personal access tokens.
GitCMS v1.2 adds production-ready media libraries, managed timestamp fields, and cover image configuration for visual editing.
GitCMS v1.1 makes it faster to find content, review tasks, and move around the app.
GitCMS v1.0 is here. Edit your content visually, commit to Git automatically, and manage multiple sites from one repo. Works with 11 frameworks, integrates with ChatGPT and Claude.
GitCMS now gives ChatGPT and Claude a more complete content-agent workflow built around content tasks, in-chat writing, and review-aware editing.
GitCMS ships the first real MCP app, replacing the older open_cms flow with a write_content app built around widget-based writing and editing.
GitCMS became more usable for teams with invitations, member management, and scoped access so the right people could work on the right sites.
GitCMS begins its first attempt at turning ChatGPT and Claude into content agents through early MCP workflow experiments.
GitCMS moved beyond a standalone editor into a real product with GitHub auth, repository onboarding, workspaces, and team setup.
GitCMS got its first real editing experience for markdown-based content sites, with Notion-like editing, slash commands, frontmatter editing, media support, and save-and-commit flow.
GitCMS began as a Chrome extension — a personal experiment to get a Notion-like editor inside GitHub without leaving the browser.