Teams | Collaboration | Customer Service | Project Management

Latest Videos

Visually track the progress of tasks with Basecamp Hill Charts

In this video, we break down Basecamp's Hill Chart feature for getting a visual representation of the status of a to-do list. Every piece of work has two phases. First there’s an uphill phase where you figure out your approach. You have a basic idea about the task, but you haven’t figured out what the solution is going to look like or how to solve all the unknowns. Eventually you reach a point where there aren’t any more unsolved problems. That’s like standing at the top of the hill. You can see clearly all the way down the other side. Then the downhill phase is just about execution.

New in Basecamp: Cycle through Images

When you have a lot of images in the Docs & Files tool, it can be difficult to flip through them quickly. Not anymore! You can now cycle through photos, videos, and files in just one click. The magnifying glass icon opens up a preview, and the arrow buttons on the right and left or the arrow keys on your keyboard let you quickly move through the items in the folder.

New in Basecamp: Group Projects on Your Home Screen

If you're looking for more organization options for your Basecamp home screen, you're in luck! With our latest product update, you can now group projects together on your home screen into piles we call Stacks. Stacks make it easy to organize your home screen by team, client, or a particular time period. Stacked projects appear at the top, along with pinned projects. And you have the control to arrange them in any order you would like. Enjoy!

37signals: Live design review for "Basecamp project stacks"

In this live design review with Jason (product), Brian (product manager), and Dorin (designer), we discuss a new Basecamp feature in development that allows people to organize their projects into stacks. This design includes a round of simplification in response to a more complicated design we looked at last week (not part of this video).

TypeScript Drama and Open Source Opinions

Recently 37signals co-founders David Heinemeier Hansson and Jason Fried found themselves at the center of an unexpected internet storm. It all began when David made a significant announcement: Turbo 8 would no longer be using TypeScript. What followed was a whirlwind of controversy and social media fireworks. In today's discussion, Kimberly Rhodes sits down with Jason and David to unpack the impact of social media on these types of discussions and the broader implications of these online controversies on open source contributions.