The Stir Kinetic Desk doesn't come cheap but this $3,890 motorized work surface converts on its own between standing and sitting positions. It also has the smarts to suggest when you should sit and ...
It's no secret that standing is better for you than sitting. The trouble is it's tricky to know just how much. With new support for Fitbit fitness tracking technology, the Stir Kinetic Desk aims to ...
Stir this week launched its Kinetic Desk, with a built-in touch screen and health tracking software to promote movement during work. Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each ...
The Stir Kinetic Smart Desk, from veterans of Apple, Ideo, NASA, and Disney, adjusts heights and tracks your habits in an effort to help you work smarter and healthier. The Stir Kinetic desk is the ...
Gamification — using gamelike mechanics and achievements to engage users — and the concept of the “quantified self” are two of the biggest trends of the last few years, and they’ve helped companies ...
Stir’s Kinetic Desk is the Crock Pot of sit-stand desks: Just set it and forget it. But at almost $3,000, it isn’t cheap. The outlook for office workers is grim: Research has shown the being sedentary ...
We poke fun at Stir sometimes, but that's mostly because $3,900 is a ridiculous amount of money to pay for a standing desk -- yes, even a "smart" one. But once you get past the sticker shock, it's ...
You may have heard a little buzz about the Stir Kinetic Desk, the super-expensive, pimped-out standing desk that changes positions throughout the day to literally keep you on your toes. Basically, it ...
Remember the Stir Kinetic, that $3,890 "smart desk" we showed you last fall? You know, the sleek-looking one made by someone who used to work on Apple's iPod team? Yep, that's the one. In any case, it ...
Stir created something of a “stir” in 2013 when it launched its Wi-Fi-connected, touchscreen-enabled smart standing desk. It may have ticked most of the boxes in terms of what you’d want from a ...
Sitting is the smoking of our generation, according to a Harvard Study -- both involves butts and are bad for your health. iPod creator JP Labrosse -- the founder and CEO of stealth startup Stir-- ...