Recently IKEA announced their first electronic sit/stand desk and it looks pretty great. Sit/stand desks are awesome. I’m standing at my desk right now, and if I wanted to sit down instead I could just push a button. In fact, I think I will…

My original “standing” desk was an IKEA Galant. I write “standing” in quotes because it wasn’t meant to be a standing desk. I extended the telescoping legs out to their max and even that was about 3 inches too short, so I put some wood blocks underneath the legs. Safe.

I worked at that desk for about 6 months, but after a while I very much missed having the option to sit and decided that if I had to chose between sitting or standing then I would sit.

The standing bug kicked in again toward the beginning of this year. I honestly just got tired of sitting all the time, especially first thing in the mornings. I would come downstairs to my office with a hot coffee and a million ideas for the day, and honestly I wanted to stand up and work because I had energy.

So I set my IKEA Galant back to its standing position and worked that way for a couple of months when I decided it was time to invest in a non-stationary standing desk (not unlike the sit/stand desk IKEA is making).

The desk I picked up is this Jarvis adjustable height desk. I wish I’d bought it years ago.

  • The height range is 23.5 – 49.5 inches.

  • It can be attached to any desktop slab that is at least 42.5″ wide and 21″ deep.

  • The control panel has an LCD that shows you the exact height (to a tenth of an inch), and has 4 memory presets.

The Jarvis desk control panel

  • The motor is fast and quiet. Lowering my desk from its standing height of 40.4 inches down to sitting height of 24.5 it takes 15 seconds. And the reverse — lifting from sitting height to standing height — takes just one second longer. The motor starts out slow as it begins moving, speeds up, and then slows down when it reaches the memory preset.

Standing is awesome. I am here, at my desk, for anywhere from 6 – 10 hours in a day. I nearly always stand for the first half of my day, and usually stand for the second half as well. If, in the evenings, I have computer-related work to do — such as editing photos — then I usually will sit.

There are some things about the IKEA desk that are great. It has a 10-year warranty, it’s inexpensive, it’s motorized (no hand crank), and it comes with a desk top slab.

But there are things about the Jarvis I think are better. It has a vastly superior motor control panel, with better buttons and the 4 programmable memory positions.

In his review, Estes said this about the buttons on the IKEA desk:

The only other gripe I can think of are those ugly buttons. Not only are they ugly, they’re also a little bit finicky. They’re barely buttons, really. […] When you’re adjusting the desk, moving your finger even slightly to one side or the other will disengage the button, and the desk will stop moving. You get the hang of it, though. It’s just a bummer that IKEA did so much great work building a beautiful desk and then skimped on the gadgety bit. Then again, IKEA’s never been into gadgets.

Moreover, the IKEA has just two buttons — up and down — and no display to let you know what height the desk is at.

What’s awesome about the memory positions of the Jarvis is that you know your setting your desk to the exact height every time you adjust it. Because the IKEA controller doesn’t have a height indicator you’re adjusting by feel every time.

Though, to be fair, in the comment section of his review, Estes says he likes not having a memory program:

I don’t actually think I’d want presets. Much to my dismay, I found myself adjusting the height constantly. I really liked to be able to change my posture by tiny amounts. Now it’s hard to go to the office and deal with my big dumb stationary desk.

But the memory programming is, for me, is alone worth the $39+ extra. And really, that’s the only significant difference. You have one point of interaction with your adjustable height desk: the control panel. Having easy-to-use buttons and a programmable height memory is pretty darn nice.

And it’s not just about making the desk easier to adjust. It’s also about consistency. My body posture has a lot of habit built in, and if my desk is an inch off, I never feel quite right.

All that to say, I’ve had my Jarvis desk for 4 months now and it’s doing great. I don’t ever plan to replace it until it dies. My friend, Ben Brooks, has had his Jarvis desk for over a year and it’s still going strong as well.

Adam Clark Estes’ Review of the IKEA Sit/Stand Desk

There are just four sponsorship slots left for the rest of this year. And, honestly, they are really prime times.

  • This upcoming week, starting Monday, Nov 3, is still open. And it’s great timing because on Tuesday we’ll be publishing our Tools & Toys holiday gift guide.

Update: this upcoming week is now booked, but there are still a few more spots for the year.

  • Also, the last two weeks of December are open. These are two huge weeks for web traffic because people looking up which apps and accessories to install on their new iPhone, iPad, or Mac. They’re also shopping around for what to buy with the gift cards they got.

So if you’ve got an awesome product, service, or company you’d like to promote then please do get in touch. If you email me in the next couple of days to book a spot, I’d be more than happy to work with you to make a deal.

Sponsorship Opportunities

On this week’s episode of The Weekly Briefly we continue on in the Power of a Focused Life series. Today’s topic: habits and routines. Specifically, how we identify the things that trigger our habit and routine actions, and how we can change and improve them.

Sponsored by:

Building and Changing Our Habits and Routines

A few weeks ago Michael Steeber wrote an article on 9to5Mac about bringing the Apple Watch’s Home screen interface over to the iPhone:

Here we are in 2014, and the iOS home screen is essentially the same as it was in 2007. Plenty of arguments have been made that the home screen looks “dated” or needs certain features, but I’m proposing not change for the sake of change, but change that unifies, modernizes, and redefines the home screen as we know it. What would happen if the Apple Watch home screen came to the iPhone?

Yesterday, Lucas Menge posted a video of a springboard-esque app that does just that. His video showing off the prototype app is very cool and interesting. It looks fun and modern, and it could definitely help with reachability issues on the Home screens of the bigger phones. But I also can’t help but think how cluttered and busy it looks — that is a lot of icons all in one place, even when zoomed in.

Video of the Apple Watch Home Screen on an iPhone

Most items I write reviews of are items that I personally buy to use. But, every once in a while, a new gadget shows up that’s just so interesting and enticing that I buy it with the business card for the sole purpose of reviewing it. Such is the case with the Aether Cone.

I got an email at the end of August from Rdio announcing that the Aether Cone was now shipping and that, as an Rdio member, I was eligible for a percentage discount for every month I’d been a subscriber, up to 45-percent off. I was intrigued by the design and the functionality. You don’t need a separate device to stream music to the Cone, it connects to Rdio all on its own and you can talk to it to request a song.

This is the review I was originally planning to publish on launch day with the new Tools & Toys, but I was able to get the E-M10 review out the door in time instead.

Review: The Aether Cone for Rdio

Lionheart Software is an independent software studio that designs and builds delightful products for startups and small teams. Our focus is building great products because we’re passionate about our work and our commitment to our customers.

If it’s a custom website or web application that you need, you can trust us to care about creating simple, beautiful interfaces that work well and stand above the crowd. Check out some of the work we’ve done in the past with our partners.

We’ve also created some iOS apps of our own, including Tweet Seeker and the popular Pushpin app for iOS.

Ready to build an amazing website or application that can take your business to the next level? We’d love to help.

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My thanks to Lionheart for sponsoring the site this week and for being one of the sponsoring Launch Partners for the new Tools & Toys. These guys make one of my favorite iOS apps: Pushpin. It’s arguably the best Pinboard client for iOS, and its iOS 8 update is just stellar. And that’s just a sample of the work they do; Lionheart is truly does some top-notch design and development work.

Lionheart (Sponsor)

John Gruber:

Everything Apple is promoting about the Air 2 is true, both in terms of what you can objectively measure, and in terms of how it feels to use it. It’s thinner, lighter, faster, and has a better display and better camera. And, yes, Touch ID is great, especially if you’ve been using it for the last year on your iPhone.

I don’t think I’m going to buy one, though.

Last year after spending three months using both the (then) new iPad Air and iPad mini with Retina, I switched from being a hard-core proponent of full-sized iPads to being a fan of the iPad mini. And I can’t imagine going back.

There is more to it than just that the mini is lighter and easier to hold with one hand. The screen size didn’t impact the way I create or “consume” content at all. Moreover, the smaller footprint of the iPad makes it easier to fit in my bag, or to carry around by itself in a sleeve.

It’s unfortunate that it looks like the iPad mini is now going to be one year behind in hardware innovation, but that’s okay. I mostly use my iPad for reading, writing, research, and basic communication. Though, now that I’m switching to a desktop Mac as my main machine, who knows… perhaps the amount of work I do on my iPad will spike in the upcoming year.

John Gruber’s iPad Air 2

This review has been on our list since the beginning. But we knew major updates of Wunderlist, OmniFocus, and Things were all in the pipe. And, now that they’ve shipped, we’ve spent time with the apps and written up our official pick for what is our favorite productivity and GTD app suite: OmniFocus (of course).

On the outside so many of these apps all seem like the same type of app with the same functionality: projects, tasks, due dates, tags, sync.

But, in working on this review, it struck me just how much different OmniFocus truly is from pretty much every other productivity app out there. OmniFocus goes far beyond the feature set that most other apps have with its use of contexts, defer dates, custom perspectives, forecast view, and review mode.

The most common arguments against OF are price and learning curve.

Regarding price, first off: you get what you pay for. OmniFocus is not overpriced, it’s priced according to its feature set. There are a lot of things OF can do with your tasks and projects that these other apps cannot.

Not to mention, the Omni Group has a decades-long history of making apps for the Mac, and they currently have some of the world’s best Mac and iOS developers working for them in Seattle. If there is a GTD app out there today that has a chance of being here in 2025, OmniFocus is at the top of that list.

And regarding learning curve, it’s true — OmniFocus takes time to discover and figure out. But there are so many resources, tutorials, and guides out there that if you’re willing to take the time and learn the app, you’ll reap the dividends for years to come (literally).

The Sweet Setup’s GTD Apps Review