Work with file versions
When you upload a new cut, Curtyn keeps it as a new version of the same file instead of a separate upload. The latest version is the one everyone sees, and the older ones stay available. This guide explains how versions work.
In this guide
Upload a new version
Open a file and add a new version rather than uploading a fresh file. Curtyn keeps them as one item with a history, so v3 doesn't become a different file from v2.
See the version history
Every version is listed with when it landed and who uploaded it. Comments stay attached to the version they were made on, so feedback never loses its context.
Compare or roll back
Open an earlier version to check what changed, or set it back as the current one if a change needs undoing. Nothing is lost by moving forward, because the history is intact.
A share link shows the latest version only. Reviewers and clients never see the working history unless you decide to show it.
Keep the latest the only one in view
Because the newest version is what every tool and every share points at, there is no “final_final_v2” problem. The latest cut is simply the cut, everywhere at once.