A more ergonomic computer setup. It’s highly surprising how very much it can do for both comfort, health, and performance. Tons of low hanging fruit that people miss. If you spend as much time as it sound siting in the same spot every day it really should be a no expenses spare kind of deal. For most applications I’d even consider it more important than the actual hardware in the box.
You really should look it up more in depth and/or ask someone who knows this stuff at a semi-professional level, but I’ll summarize roughly some points.
The most important part is how you sit. Get a really good professional quality chair, a large surface for input devices, and mount your screen(s) on arm(s) or other device that make them easily repositioned. Adjustability is key in all of these, everything should be independently movable and the purpose is to enable you to sit right without discomfort or effort, but you member that you still have to actually do so.
There are advantages to standing instead of siting, but since you cant do that ALL the time in order to enable it you need motorized table legs. Or at least thats how I did it.
The other stuff is more posible to just go on what feels and look right; big screens but more importantly high colour quality, and the purpose is not to cover you entire visual feild but rather enabling having them further away and so straining your eyes less. I’ve personaly found using an extremely hgih precision mouse and cranking the acceleration up to crazy levels matter more than shape or weight; I rarely have to more it more than a centimeter. Making your enviroment nice looking and uncluttered can have a concrete impact and of corse light levels and avoiding both glare and eyestrain from to much contrast helps. Oh, and for bayes sake use headphones not speakers; you probably know some audiophile that can give better instructions then me on the specifics of that.
My current setup: Ergotron dual arms, big IKEA glass table with motorized legs to raise or lower. Wireless keyboard. Wacom Intuos tablet double as my main mouse. 2x identical screens, forgot the exact specs but they’re good. Entire room designed carefully around the computer with bed thrown in as an afterthought. Bunch of electrical supply stuff and lights. High quality voice chat and music headset. Bunch of stuff I forgot or is to minor to bother listing.
There are advantages to standing instead of siting, but since you cant do that ALL the time in order to enable it you need motorized table legs. Or at least thats how I did it.
I just put a small table on top of a bigger table. Switch the place of the keyboard/laptop/book. It seems to me that if you stand enough the expected utility of a super chair is pretty low, maybe even negative if it makes you sit more. I still dream about getting one to be honest though.
A more ergonomic computer setup. It’s highly surprising how very much it can do for both comfort, health, and performance. Tons of low hanging fruit that people miss. If you spend as much time as it sound siting in the same spot every day it really should be a no expenses spare kind of deal. For most applications I’d even consider it more important than the actual hardware in the box.
You really should look it up more in depth and/or ask someone who knows this stuff at a semi-professional level, but I’ll summarize roughly some points.
The most important part is how you sit. Get a really good professional quality chair, a large surface for input devices, and mount your screen(s) on arm(s) or other device that make them easily repositioned. Adjustability is key in all of these, everything should be independently movable and the purpose is to enable you to sit right without discomfort or effort, but you member that you still have to actually do so.
There are advantages to standing instead of siting, but since you cant do that ALL the time in order to enable it you need motorized table legs. Or at least thats how I did it.
The other stuff is more posible to just go on what feels and look right; big screens but more importantly high colour quality, and the purpose is not to cover you entire visual feild but rather enabling having them further away and so straining your eyes less. I’ve personaly found using an extremely hgih precision mouse and cranking the acceleration up to crazy levels matter more than shape or weight; I rarely have to more it more than a centimeter. Making your enviroment nice looking and uncluttered can have a concrete impact and of corse light levels and avoiding both glare and eyestrain from to much contrast helps. Oh, and for bayes sake use headphones not speakers; you probably know some audiophile that can give better instructions then me on the specifics of that.
My current setup: Ergotron dual arms, big IKEA glass table with motorized legs to raise or lower. Wireless keyboard. Wacom Intuos tablet double as my main mouse. 2x identical screens, forgot the exact specs but they’re good. Entire room designed carefully around the computer with bed thrown in as an afterthought. Bunch of electrical supply stuff and lights. High quality voice chat and music headset. Bunch of stuff I forgot or is to minor to bother listing.
I just put a small table on top of a bigger table. Switch the place of the keyboard/laptop/book. It seems to me that if you stand enough the expected utility of a super chair is pretty low, maybe even negative if it makes you sit more. I still dream about getting one to be honest though.