Honest reviews of standing desks, ergonomic chairs, monitors, and the gear that actually improves how you work — not just how your setup looks on Twitter.
From the desk you sit at to the light that hits your face on calls — we cover it all with actual tests, not spec sheet comparisons.
Standing, L-shaped, corner, and custom. We've tested $200 Amazon specials and $3,000 Uplift setups.
Ergonomic office chairs, gaming hybrids, and saddle stools. Your back will thank you for reading this first.
4K, ultrawide, curved, and portable displays. Single-monitor to triple-screen setups explained plainly.
Key lights, bias lighting, ring lights, and smart bulbs. Stop looking like a shadow on video calls.
Raceways, grommets, under-desk trays, and wireless upgrades. A clean desk is a functional desk.
Webcams, microphones, headsets, and audio interfaces for people who care about how they sound and look on calls.
We spent 90 days with the E7 Pro as our primary desk. Spoiler: it replaced our $1,200 Uplift V2. Here's why, and who should (and shouldn't) buy it.
One costs $449. The other costs $1,795. Is the Herman Miller worth 4x the price? Honest answer inside.
Ultrawides look incredible. But they're not right for everyone. Here's how to know which side you're on before you buy.
Complete setup recommendations at every budget level — every product link tested and verified, no padding with junk that doesn't belong.
Everything you actually need. Nothing you don't. Looks better than most corporate desks.
The sweet spot. Standing desk, great monitor, decent chair. Game-changing ergonomics without the premium pain.
For people who spend 8+ hours a day at a desk. Every purchase is justified by daily quality-of-life gains.
Herman Miller, 4K ultrawide, premium audio. If you're going to spend a lot of time here, make it exceptional.
Filtered from hundreds of hours of testing. These are the products we'd spend our own money on.
We tested 14 different cable management setups. The $12 Amazon raceway beat the $80 premium tray.
Most dual monitor setups are wrong. Here's the ergonomically correct way and why it matters for your neck.
You don't need a podcast mic to sound great on Zoom. But you do need something better than your laptop.