When work sent us home in March 2020 but before all the COVID lockdowns were in place, I quickly pulled the trigger on a standing desk purchase that I had been considering for a while. I’m so thankful that I did since they were hard to find for a while and prices went up a lot. I’ve reviewed the functionality of my VertiDesk before, but after 5 years, it’s time to talk about aesthetics.
I initially slapped a 3/4″ piece of pine plywood on top with a little bit of edge banding and some light attempts at cable management. It worked fine but it was never what I wanted and as with most desk areas, the surface got cluttered and the cables procreated. It also doesn’t help that in addition to my desktop with two monitors, I also have a laptop with a docking station connected via KVM, but I also have a second laptop from work that gets used most days too.
When I built the nightstand, I carefully planned out the walnut plywood usage so that I’d have a piece leftover that was just about the desired size of my desk. I added some ~1/4″ strips of walnut as edge banding and used multiple coats of General Finishes Arm-R-Seal Oil Based Topcoat in semi-gloss to make it look real purdy. Then I had to let the whole project sit for about a month. The instructions on the can note that you shouldn’t set anything heavy on the finish until it fully cures in 30 days. I was busy anyway, so I decided to wait the full period.
As I removed everything from my desk, I was surprised to see the giant pile that it produced, but I was finally able to get it cleaned off and then attach the new desk. While I had it upside down, I mounted some power strips and a cable management solution from Flexispot. As I put everything back in place, I paid a lot of attention to what cables needed to run down to the floor and what could stay up on the desk. I even 3D printed a holder for my thunderbolt dock so I could keep it on the bottom of the desk surface.
When I built the desk, I also built a small platform for the center monitor and spent way too long designing custom honeycomb 3D printed risers that no one will ever see. This was the perfect height to hide the mess of cables associated with my KVM switch, SD card reader, etc. Now I just see the front of the switch poking out and I can easily click the button to switch back and forth between my machines.
I’m very happy with the end result. That Flexispot cable management system is a major upgrade. I can easily add more cables in the future and remove ones that are already in place. They hold a massive amount of wiring and even some power bricks as well. There is still a small pile of wires on the ground for the battery backup and network switch that I need to clean up, but this is one of those projects that will always have “one more thing” that I can improve.
COVID-19: Day 1826 (Five Years)
That was the first paragraph of a post from March 6, 2020, one week before the lockdown started for us. Looking back at the many posts I wrote about COVID-19 I had two thoughts. First, I’m so glad that I wrote all those posts. It’s an incredible record of what was going through my head as I went through an event that will be in history books. Secondly, I’m not embarrassed by what I wrote. That’s a surprise… you can’t find the first years of this blog (mid 2000’s) on my site anymore because I cringe when I read a lot of those posts. But our family’s approach to COVID-19 and other health issues hasn’t changed even after five years: get vaccinated, trust the current science (even when new research invalidates old research), and rely on guidelines from the experts (even when it gets updated.)
The disease is still killing a lot of people. Thankfully death rates are lower now, but it’s still well-entrenched in the top 10 causes for death (though it takes a couple years for agencies to collect exact numbers.)
Our family has been COVID-19 free for quite a while. I’m very thankful for that because even though the risk of death is lower than before, there are still risks of nasty downstream impacts from the disease. Two of the YouTubers that we follow have been hit by long COVID-19. Shawn from Kids Invent Stuff recently announced his challenges with it and Diana from Physics girl just got out of bed for the first time in two years. While I like that society isn’t shut down by this disease anymore, we can’t just ignore it. Research needs to continue, and we need to keep communicating the importance of vaccines. If everyone got vaccinated, couldn’t we remove this from the top 10 killer list?
One of the biggest challenges, especially during the first couple years of COVID-19, was educating people. There is enough blame for that to spread around to everyone: scientists, news media, government, the general population, etc. Unfortunately, this problem doesn’t seem to have gotten better. How much of people’s opinions are currently formed by TikTok and doom scrolling? How is our reaction going to be any more informed the next time we go through an emergency like this? On the home front, I’ve put extra effort into trying to teach Elijah how to evaluate information that he hears.
It would be hard to live through a situation like this and not be forever changed. The mental and emotional aspects are hard to evaluate but there are regular parts of my visible life that are still different than before the pandemic. Here are some that I can think of:
These small changes have enhanced my life in unexpected ways, but the continued toll of COVID-19 shows the need for ongoing research and vaccine promotion. We can’t afford to let misinformation shape our actions. We have to prioritize education and getting information from trustworthy sources to handle inevitable future emergencies more effectively.