# Basecamp Five

> Source: <https://world.hey.com/dhh/basecamp-five-8fcfd2ef>
> Published: 2026-05-26 10:57:22+00:00

I've been working on

[Basecamp](https://basecamp.com/)for half my life, and nearly my entire professional career in software. The first code was written in the summer of 2003 when I was just 23. Now I'm 46, and we've just released the fifth major version.It's an incredible update to a service that continues to help about a million users a day avoid dropping the ball when working with others. It's AI accessible, but not agent hysteric. It's still famously easy to use, still executes the basics beautifully, and still focuses on the small to medium-sized teams we've been serving in the

[Fortune 5,000,000](https://37signals.com/10)for decades.Here are just three of my favorite new features in Basecamp 5:

**Lexxy editor**: Our

[new text editor](https://x.com/dhh/status/2059203600035819866?s=20)finally brings tables, markdown, and live syntax highlighting for code to Basecamp. Oh, and voice notes. It's built on Meta's Lexical editor toolkit, and it's going to ship as the default for Action Text in the next major version of Rails.

**Keyboard accessible**: After moving to Linux, building

[Omarchy](https://omarchy.org/), and acquiring a taste for mechanical keyboards, I've come to love navigating the computer primarily through hotkeys. So with a lot of effort,

[Basecamp is now a delight to drive through the keys](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MOIG0QGJZe8), and you don't have to be a brainiac to remember them all: just hold down SHIFT, and they're revealed in the interface. SHIFT + S opens the sidebar, ESC moves focus between it and the main page, SHIFT + C starts composing a comment/chat line/answer.

**The permanent sidebar**: If you live in Basecamp, like I do, it's to stay on top of all the new things that are constantly happening in a busy account, and that's just gotten so much faster with the new permanent sidebar. Before, we had a Hey! menu in the top bar. You'd get a little dot when something was new, then you'd open it, click, and the menu would close. If you had five things that were new, it'd be open-click-close, open-click-close, five times. Being able to zoom through these now with just the return key, tap, tap, tap, and I've read three new things. So good.

And there's so much more. Jason put together a

[great summary](https://basecamp.com/5)on the new marketing site, which in itself is brand new too. A back-to-basics design in many ways. As our entire industry is getting swept up in agent hysteria (and I love AI as much as anyone!), we thought it better to focus on the human communication that's the cornerstone of Basecamp. The new site just speaks plainly to that mission and shows you the software right at the top.

Another thing that's back is color, specifically in the logo. Basecamp's clever but flat paperclip logo has been replaced with a modern take of our original rolling mountains. In full three dimensions, with depth and a gradient. Love it.

Overall, I'm really proud of what we've built with Basecamp Five. We're inching in on a quarter of a century in service! We still have customers who signed up back in early 2004! This is the

[kind of legacy](https://37signals.com/policies/until-the-end-of-the-internet)that makes me beam, and the new version is just ace.

If you've tried Basecamp in the past,
