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Posted by James72689 2 days ago

My two-part desk setup(arslan.io)
103 points | 58 commentspage 2
rickdg 2 hours ago|
You have one monitor yes, but what about second monitor?
dnmc 2 hours ago|
When you have two monitors, is your head always turned to one side? That always hurts my neck, so I wind up with the second monitor relegated to the side, where I never actually look at it.
benoau 1 hour ago|||
This is why ultrawides are very comfortable, you can focus on the center region where 2x monitors likely have their edges meeting.
doubled112 1 hour ago||
I repurposed a 43” 4K TV as a monitor. The thing I’m working on goes roughly in the middle, everything else is sprawled out wherever.
jedberg 58 minutes ago||||
I have three monitors. The left and right are turned vertically. They're all 30". So the main screen is in the center and I keep slack/email/web browser with docs/info on the left and usually Twitch DJs or Spotify on the right. So usually I'm looking forward but I look left briefly throughout the day.
rogerrogerr 1 hour ago||||
I do this too, and just put less-important stuff on the second monitor. Work chat, music, logs, whatever.
skydhash 1 hour ago|||
I have a rotating chair (normal desk chair) and I rotate the whole chair to look at the other screen If I need to look at it for more than one second.
mold_aid 2 hours ago||
I mean I love this kind of stuff but honestly the answer here is "have a huge honking office." I have a digital/reading split and there's actually a technical term for it: a mess.

What I like to do is think of the office less as a discrete space and more like a colonial, expansionist government - if I have sat in a chair for any amount of time, anything in a five-foot radius starts accruing stacks of books, paper pads, that kind of thing. My wife loves this! Sometimes it gets cold in a room and I leave it for a while and when I return months later it's like discovering an office from the past

erelong 2 hours ago||
Initially thought one desk was facing the room, the other desk would be behind facing the wall (where there is bookshelf space instead I guess)

I have considered that as a dual setup (a desk towards room and a desk behind you up against wall)

nntwozz 1 hour ago||
Tolomeo detected.

Michele De Lucchi & Giancarlo Fassina (1987)

Tomte 2 hours ago||
What is the lamp, the one that‘s like a paper globe?

That was everywhere in my childhood.

dredmorbius 1 hour ago||
"Paper lantern" generally. Many inexpensive import shops carried them in the Before Times. Widely available now. They offer a soft ambient glow. Not ideal as a reading lamp (a bit too diffuse), but quite good for general room lighting.

<https://duckduckgo.com/?q=round+paper+lamp&iar=images&t=ftsa>

Munksgaard 1 hour ago|||
Not necessarily that specific lamp, but GULLSUDARE from IKEA is the same kind.
righthand 2 hours ago||
Japanese lantern
lorecore 2 hours ago||
It's not mentioned in the article but one thing I constantly struggle with when laying out my office is facing the desk toward the wall (like he originally had it) vs. facing toward the room (the "digital" side of his desk now). I don't like facing the wall but I find when I face the room the monitor totally blocks my view and it kind of looks like ass from the other side. This guy did way better cable management than I have done but still, you're looking at the back side of a monitor like a huge 2001 style monolith, especially if your monitor is black.

I still don't have a good solution for this, and curious what others are doing.

arjie 1 hour ago||
I place mine against the wall. It is most convenient this way because the Ethernet and power outlets are against the wall. In addition it means that the remainder of the space is large enough to be used for other things. My wife and I sit in the same room with a table with the 3D printer, home servers, and our various shared workbench tasks in between us. I sit by the window because I like sunlight and looking over the city, and while my wife does too my mood is more mercurially related to it than is hers.

Overall, power and data management dominate this entire arrangement. I have far too many devices each of which draw very little power but demand their own massive power connections. In the end, I will likely just rack most of them to make room for the second child we plan to have.

jedberg 54 minutes ago|||
It's not an issue if your office is so small that no one is hanging out in front of it. :)

My wife only comes in to get printouts and supplies if I'm working, and if she's working (we share the "battle station" by switching out whose laptop is connected to the dock) I basically only go in there to quickly chat and walk around to the other side.

spectra72 2 hours ago|||
Walking into my office, you definitely see the backside of my dual monitor + audio interfaces + studio monitor speakers (I dabble in music production as well as tech) from the doorway.

I just live with it. I'm on the good side. The few times a day my wife needs to talk to me she just comes around to my side of the desk anyways.

IanCal 2 hours ago|||
A few scattered thoughts but a board with decoration or art of a similar size could be a nice cover, the other (more building required) would be to look if there’s a way you can fold down/away the monitor when not in use.
normie3000 1 hour ago|||
You just need a home cubicle.
globular-toast 1 hour ago||
If you do good cable management it looks good imo. I have a desk arm with monitors attached on their VESA mounts. All the monitor cabling is attached to the mounts and goes into the cable management tray under the desk with everything else.
weego 2 hours ago||
Adding another desk isn't "rethinking the desk". It's adding another desk with a slightly different purpose to the first desk. It's maximalism under the guise of insight.
mvdtnz 1 hour ago|
He didn't add another desk. Did you read the linked article?
mvdtnz 1 hour ago||
This does not look like the work space of someone who does serious work.
866-RON-0-FEZ 1 hour ago|
Will there be a follow-up when that Ikea tissue-paper lamp catches fire and burns his flat down?

I don't know how those things are legal, like building a computer case out of recycled newspaper clippings.

mrweasel 1 hour ago||
Those where everywhere in the late 80s, complete with 80W incandescent light bulbs. I'm not suggestion that it can't catch fire, but even if it did wouldn't the paper would burn so fast that not enough heat is generated to ignite anything else?
rogerrogerr 1 hour ago||
Betcha there’s an LED in there creating less waste heat than the sunlight hitting it during the day.

Would you like to buy a fire insurance policy against the specific casualty of that lamp igniting from its light source and burning OP’s flat down? I’ll sell you one for a great price.

866-RON-0-FEZ 1 hour ago||
I don't know when's the last time you handled an Edison base LED bulb but they get really goddamn hot at the base where they cram all the improperly-cooled electronics into an area the size of a thumbnail.

You're literally arguing that rice paper is an acceptable material for electrical safety.

Frayed cord, damaged/defective socket, the list of potential ignition sources goes on but hey let's wrap it all in dry grass and kindling.

rogerrogerr 1 hour ago||
Looks like this is the product: https://www.ikea.com/us/en/p/gullsudare-pendant-lamp-shade-w...

They pair it with a 2.8W bulb: https://www.ikea.com/us/en/p/solhetta-led-bulb-e26-450-lumen...

Less than an ancient phone charger. OP’s flat will be fine.

866-RON-0-FEZ 1 hour ago||
No one is lighting a room with a 2.8W LED (equivalent to a 25W incandescent). That is barely enough light for a focused desk lamp.
rogerrogerr 1 hour ago||
40W equivalent, if you read the link.

And in OP’s pictures, I totally believe that’s the bulb they’re using. Notice they have a desk lamp for up close work, and a freaking enormous window to let in sunlight. No need to flood the space with light with the hanging pendant thing.