Wanted to experiment with working more often while standing (since I estimated a 40-50% chance this would be a good overall choice, between potential health gains and potential productivity gains). Winced at the thought of buying a $100 piece of furniture that would make this possible. Realized that this equated to about 25 cents a day, even at a relatively conservative value of how often I’d use it. And I would absolutely pay 25 cents per day to RENT this thing.
And now I own the thing! And I’m happy every time I see it, and so far I feel good on days when I use it. Odd that one of my lasting gains from CFAR is being better at spending money.
What product do you use? For good posture, I want the monitor(s) to be much higher than the surface the keyboard lies on, but most standing desks I’ve seen have just one surface.
I use a cardboard desk from chairigami.com. Single-surface, but I’m in the process of setting something up for less neck strain. The desk itself was very cheap and portable.
I’ve set up Ikea IVAR so that the middle shelf is at a good height for a keyboard when standing up and the top shelf can hold a display. The keyboard height needs to be pretty precise, so the adjustable shelf height is a very nice feature.
If you’re not picky about aesthetics, it’s almost trivially easy to build a platform for the monitor to go on—textbooks, sturdy boxes, locker shelves, even small side tables can be stacked atop a keyboard-height platform.
ETA: Obviously, this goes for improving the viewing angles of one’s seated workstation too (though it seems like a side table might be a little much.)
I’m not at all picky about aesthetics, just curious about what people use in case I want to make a more expensive purchase in the future. My own setup is this, with which I’m reasonably happy (though I need to get a larger and slightly taller table/dresser/keyboard surface).
headdesk I could also just answer your question I suppose:
I briefly had access to a Fredrik desk from Ikea; it was the right height for me so I didn’t examine closely but I’m fairly sure it was adjustable. (But it was only briefly. Hence my box experiments.)
Wanted to experiment with working more often while standing (since I estimated a 40-50% chance this would be a good overall choice, between potential health gains and potential productivity gains). Winced at the thought of buying a $100 piece of furniture that would make this possible. Realized that this equated to about 25 cents a day, even at a relatively conservative value of how often I’d use it. And I would absolutely pay 25 cents per day to RENT this thing.
And now I own the thing! And I’m happy every time I see it, and so far I feel good on days when I use it. Odd that one of my lasting gains from CFAR is being better at spending money.
What product do you use? For good posture, I want the monitor(s) to be much higher than the surface the keyboard lies on, but most standing desks I’ve seen have just one surface.
I use a cardboard desk from chairigami.com. Single-surface, but I’m in the process of setting something up for less neck strain. The desk itself was very cheap and portable.
I’ve set up Ikea IVAR so that the middle shelf is at a good height for a keyboard when standing up and the top shelf can hold a display. The keyboard height needs to be pretty precise, so the adjustable shelf height is a very nice feature.
If you’re not picky about aesthetics, it’s almost trivially easy to build a platform for the monitor to go on—textbooks, sturdy boxes, locker shelves, even small side tables can be stacked atop a keyboard-height platform.
ETA: Obviously, this goes for improving the viewing angles of one’s seated workstation too (though it seems like a side table might be a little much.)
I’m not at all picky about aesthetics, just curious about what people use in case I want to make a more expensive purchase in the future. My own setup is this, with which I’m reasonably happy (though I need to get a larger and slightly taller table/dresser/keyboard surface).
headdesk I could also just answer your question I suppose:
I briefly had access to a Fredrik desk from Ikea; it was the right height for me so I didn’t examine closely but I’m fairly sure it was adjustable. (But it was only briefly. Hence my box experiments.)