Everything we’ve tested, argued over, and eventually published.
This is the working record: buying guides that reflect actual test conditions, category deep-dives that update when products change, and write-ups on the things we returned and why. Not a content calendar. Not a product listing with enthusiasm bolted on.
Get the full test notes, not just the summary
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The raw scoring sheet — the 14-point rubric behind every published review, with the unrounded numbers that don’t make the final write-up
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Early access to reviews — full drafts land in inboxes 48 hours before they publish publicly, while pricing is more likely to still be accurate
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The return report — a one-section summary of every product returned that cycle, with the reason. The most useful thing in the newsletter, consistently.
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What’s on our actual desks right now — updated each issue. Currently: 38 products that survived the cut across six categories.
“The return report alone is worth the subscription. I’ve read three detailed reviews elsewhere on a product only to see it show up in your returns section with a two-line explanation that saved me the trouble.”
— Daniel Osei, Chicago IL, subscriber since March 2023
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The long reads that get referenced most
Best Desk Setups Under $500
Nine complete builds tested across different room sizes and desk depths. Includes the $320 setup that outperformed everything double its price, and the mistakes that inflate budgets without improving outcomes.
The Ergonomics Rabbit Hole
Six-part series covering chair selection, monitor height, keyboard angle, and the things that sound pseudoscientific until your back stops hurting. Starts with what actually matters and works outward from there.
Monitors That Actually Hold Their Value
14 monitors tracked over 18 months — comparing their day-one specs against how they hold up, how their prices move, and whether the panel quality matches what it claimed at launch. Three of them are still worth buying at current prices.
How to Stop Buying Cables
The one guide that exists specifically to stop you from owning 40 cables you don’t use. Covers what you actually need, why USB-C standards still create confusion in 2026, and the cable management hardware worth buying once instead of repeatedly.
