Logitech Zone wireless headsets

In an earlier post, I talked about how I built an effective home/work office by using Logitech’s MX Keys keyboard and MX Master mouse with 2 unifying receivers. I put one receiver in my home PC, one in my work laptop, and connect both systems into one monitor.

Switching between home and work environments is easy, and helps keep work and life separate. I can switch to my home PC when I’m done with work and not be tempted to log in and keep working in the evenings, when I’m rechgarging by spending time with family,  relaxing and preparing for tomorrow’s tasks.

The one snag in my setup is headsets. I have a work headset and a home headset, both wired models. I end up havcing to switch between them when I switch from home to work and vice versa.

Logitech has come out with the Zone Wireless headset, a nice looking Bluetooth headset. What sets it apart is a new unifying receiver that can tie in the headset and Logitech MX keyboards and mice. It’ll also connect via Bluetooth to a cell phone.

With a Zone Wireless headset and a second audio unifying receiver, I could make a seamless work/home/phone environment and get rid of two more cables.

 

State of the Home Office, 2022

I upgraded my workspace for 2022.

I used to have a dual monitor setup with a 23″ 16:9 monitor and a 19″ 4:3 monitor. This worked adequately for several years, but the mixed geometry made moving windows from one screen to another difficult.

I replaced two monitors with a single LG 34″ ultrawide flat screen monitor, and I couldn’t be happier. I had thought about buying a curved monitor, but this monitor was relatively inexpensive and I don’t have the focus issues I thought I’d have with such a wide monitor. An ultrawide monitor greatly improves working on spreadsheets  – I can get so much more of the spreadsheet in one screen without side-scrolling.

With 2560 x 1440 resolution, I have a lot of real estate to work with. LG includes software that allows you to tile windows based on several layouts, making multi-screen use easy. Whereas I used to use 2 full screen sessions with my multi-monitor setup, with one ultrawide monitor I default to 3 or more tiled regions with 1 or 2 windows on top of each other.It didn’t take long to get comfortable with this layout; I went into my office with a single laptop screen and 27″ monitor and it felt cramped!

One feature I wanted was an articulating monitor arm to replace the stock monitor stand. A Vivo single monitor arm made for an inexpensive upgrade to my desktop. My monitor has a built-in VESA mount, so installing the arm took 10 minutes. I now have more tilt/swivel range, and can raise/lower the monitor father than the stock stand – and I cleared out usable space under the monitor. And, I have to admit, it looks cooler than a center-mount stand.

I’ve scrimped on keyboards for years, using a low-end wireless keyboard/mouse combo. I wanted to upgrade to a mechanical tenkey-less keyboard, but my home office is an “open seating plan”, it’s off of our living room and the clicking noise of a mechanical keyboard would be distracting. My 1991 IBM Model M keyboard will need to stay in storage for the foreseeable future.

I read glowing reviews of the Logitech MX Keys keyboard. At $120, it’s the priciest keyboard I’ve ever bought. Seeing as it’s my main interface with my computer, it makes perfect sense to get the right keyboard. It’s a membrane keyboard, but has a scissor switch and positive feel. The keys are sculpted, with a round indent where your fingers land, and in initial use the indents seem to help you center your fingertips on the keys.

I bought a Logitech MX Anywhere mouse, and can connect both mouse and monitor with one receiver.Both keyboard and mouse can connect to 3 hosts using a USB receiver or Bluetooth, so I can put one receiver in my desktop, one in my work laptop, and share peripherals. I can use the keyboard with my phone via Bluetooth as t

Logitech has an application called Logitech Flow that is the kicker. With Flow and two devices with unified receivers, you can seamlessly switch peripherals between computers. With my laptop alongside my desktop monitor, when I move the mouse off of the desktop screen, the mouse appears on my laptop.I have some tools that only run on my work laptop, so I can focus those tools on the laptop screen and do the rest of the work in a web browser on my main screen.

I upgraded my desktop in 2021 –  a used Dell desktop with 16 GB of RAM and a 3.2 Ghz i7 CPU. I installed Windows 10 on a new SSD and used the SATA drive for storage and backup. While it’s a 3 year-old desktop, with 4 cores and a decently fast clock speed, it runs well enough to keep multiple windows running.

These changes will make it easier to work (and multitask!)  from home.

Staying Productive

We’re living in interesting times, with those who are lucky able to perform some semblance of their work responsibilities from home. Working from home presents its own challenges, many of which I faced when working as a freelance consultant earlier in my career.

I thought I’d summarize some of the things I’d learned here:

1. Get your work space organized, even if it’s a portable space.

Having a space that’s focused on work is important when you’re trying to keep work and home separate. I violate this rule by using my home computer to access work systems via the cloud, but that’s more of an ergonomic need. If you can use a computer armoire and close it up at the end of the day, even better!

Having a space free of clutter and free of non-work distractions may help you keep focused when you’re working. I use a tried-and-true method of breaking my workspace into A space, B space, and C space.

A space is space in my vision when I’m working, and if I use an item daily, it’s in my A space.

B space is for things I use occasionally. I keep those handy, but not in my workspace. I have an armoire top behind me that I use for those things.

C space is for things that I rarely use. They’re in a cabinet or in my storage space.

2. Get the best chair you can afford.

Bruce Sterling said that you most likely spend a third of your life sitting in an office chair, and a third of your time sleeping. Spending up on your desk chair (and mattress) are some of the best investments you could make when you amortize the costs.

3. Wake up, dress for the part, shave/shower as if you’re going into an office.

I’ve always been lucky to have a partner who went into an office, so I was aligned to a “business hours” schedule. Waking up at your usual time, showering, and dressing for “your” office always helps me remain focused – having video calls helps with keeping up appearances, too.

4. Set a schedule – take set breaks for getting up, lunch, coffee, etc.

We’re all missing elements of structure that commuting, working in an office, lunching with co-workers, and leaving to go home provide. In addition to maintaining my job responsibilities, I’m also managing two kids who are remote-schooling for the rest of the year.

It’s important to me to keep the kids with some element of structure as well. They get up at the same time, shower, clean their rooms, and we all eat breakfast at the same time. That’s time to go over daily plans and spend some time as a family before going our separate ways with work and school. We get back together for lunch together at the same time, and usually eat outside to get a break from computer screens.

5. Don’t eat at your desk!

Your keyboard will love you for it.

6. When you stop working, leave work alone. Make some mental separation between home/work, even if there’s no physical space.

Work/Life balance is important, and harder to maintain when you do both in the same physical space. Some tips that have worked for me:

  • There are a multitude of ideas online for ways to hide a laptop/office workstation for people living in small spaces, ranging from screens, to repurposing closet space as a portable work area, and computer armoires. Those are great ways to make work “go away” at the end of the day.
  • Setting your out of office reminders on email and out of office statuses on chat/collaboration tools will take some of the immediacy in off-hours requests and notifications.

7. Make the most of your time.

I normally spend 3 hours a day in round-trip commute time. I accept this as the price of doing business where I live, but I used the time to listen to podcasts to make productive use of the time.

Now that I’m not commuting, I wake up at the same time, but spend that distraction-free time in the morning on an online training certification I could never make time for when commuting to work.

8. Not being OK is OK.

You’re not working from home, you’re trying to do your best while working through a global pandemic. It’s OK to be stressed, sleepless or otherwise not feeling your best.

Take time out to recharge. Take a walk. Get some sun, Talk to friends of yours over a video conference. Call your family. Meditate – there are many meditation apps that can help start you on a mission. Here is a good list to start from. I started with Headspace.com and bounce between it, Welzen and Buddhify.