I’ve read many articles and personal stories about standing desks, but this article by Corbett Barr is one of the better ones. Corbett not only shares his personal experience about moving to a standing desk, but he also lists out several resources and other areas of information regarding standing.

I switched to a standing desk two and a half months ago and it’s been a love-hate relationship. I love the extra energy that I feel throughout the day, and I love knowing that it is far healthier for me to stand than to sit for such long periods of time.

But deep down I don’t like standing. For me, I’m giving something up that is most often experienced only when sitting: that feeling you get when you lean far back in your desk chair, take a deep breath, hold your coffee in both hands, and stare up past the computer — simultaneously reveling in the quiet joy of the moment while also thinking your way through whatever conundrum your project has presented you with.

A Great Article About Standing Desks

Timing is the best way to keep track of the time you spend with your Mac. It automatically tracks which documents you are editing, applications you use, and the domains of the websites you visit. You’ll never have to worry about forgetting to start or stop a timer again!

After tracking, just drag and drop activities into projects. Sophisticated graphs show you how you spent your time each day and which projects consumed most of your time.

Only this week, Timing is available at a 50% discount off the regular price of $19.99. Get it from the Mac App Store today!

[Sponsor] Timing – Automatic Time Tracking for OS X

My thanks to Typekit for again sponsoring the RSS feed. Typekit is a fantastic and easy way to use custom fonts on the Web. I use Typekit here on shawnblanc.net. It was a piece of cake to set up, and I find the site to be more readable.

If you want to spruce up your weblog, or if you are a web developer that wants to offer your clients a depth of typeface choices, I highly recommended you look into Typekit. All their plans come with a free 30-day trial.

Typekit

In short, if you’re buying an 11-inch MacBook Air the increase in performance over the 1.6GHz i5 is noticeable; if you’re buying a 13-inch Air that comes stock with the 1.7GHz i5 then the improvement is more subtle.

Alas, no mention of battery life comparisons. Hopefully future in-depth tests will compare the battery life of the i5 MacBook Air against the i7.

Macworld’s Preliminary Benchmarks of the i7 MacBook Airs Compared to the i5

Scott Adams (who lives in San Francisco) got rid of his iPhone because it got worthless reception and he went to Android:

Anyway, my Android phone works most of the time for voice calls. But I’m afraid to actually use it because the battery life is about an hour and it’s no good to me with no power.

Now I only think of my phone as an emergency device, like my first brick-sized cell phone. I wouldn’t use it to make a social phone call. My battery wouldn’t last. And I wouldn’t often use it for email because the keyboard sucks and the battery drains then as well.

Uncommunication Devices

Jim Dalrymple, in his review of the 13-inch MacBook Air, hits on exactly why I think the 15-inch MacBook Pro will be replaced by a powerful 15-inch MacBook Air:

With the release of the latest 13-inch MacBook [Air], Apple has once again reduced the number of factors users have to consider when purchasing a laptop computer.

There was a time when you went shopping for a laptop that you would have to consider all the things you wanted to do with the machine and eliminate models based on those criteria. Things like having enough power to record music or process a mix are a thing of the past.

All of Apple’s laptops are powerful enough to do all of those things these days. The only real consideration left is the screen size you want.

Screen Size Matters

Jay J. Nelson wrote a nice overview of Adobe InDesign CS5.5 for Macworld. InDesign is my favorite Creative Suite app and the one I’m most familiar with. I still use CS3 (though I haven’t yet installed it onto my MacBook Air, and even when I do I’ve heard rumors that I won’t be able anyway), but with these new digital publishing tools that InDesign CS5.5 has it may be worth it to upgrade.

Macworld’s Review of Adobe InDesign CS5.5

Chris Ziegler at This is My Next:

There’s an unexpected processor bump from 1.2GHz up to 1.5GHz of dual-core Snapdragon power. No change to RAM (still 1GB) or battery (still around 6300 mAh) — the battery life drain is “slightly more,” but there’s no specifically quoted times. The current unit here is using a special build of webOS 3.0, with so far none of the promised changes in the upcoming OTA update — not to worry, though, the upcoming firmware fix is coming to the 4G model, as well. The Kindle and HP MovieStore apps are both still stubs promising that the actual apps are “coming very soon.”

Regarding the HP TouchPad 4G for AT&T

If Steve Jobs got on stage this fall and all he said was, “We’ve designed a new iPhone and we think it’s pretty great. It goes on sale next week.” Then I would still be in line to buy one. So would a third of those in this survey by eWeek.

I would be in line because: (a) I know I can sell my iPhone 4 on Craigslist to cover the cost of my iPhone upgrade; (b) using and being familiar with the latest tech (within reason) is a big part of my job; and (c) I’m a huge nerd (Big surprise, right?).

Good marketing may get people in the door the first time, but good product design gets them in the door the second (and third, and fourth, and fifth) time.

I Would Buy the Next iPhone Sight-Unseen