Site icon Brent Ozar

My Standing Desk: NextDesk Terra Pro Review

My desk setup
My desk setup.

I work from home as a database consultant. For years, I’ve had two desks in my office – a normal sitting desk, and a standing desk over in the corner. Every now and then, when I was feeling ambitious, I’d disconnect my laptop, shuffle over to the standing desk, and work from over there.

But because I had to move my laptop over there, and I didn’t have the same monitor/keyboard/trackpad, and I didn’t have my recording gear over there…I almost never bothered. The standing desk went unused.

A few months ago, I took the plunge and bought a $3,500 NextDesk Terra Pro for three reasons:

Reason #1: I can raise my whole desk to a memorized standing height or sitting height with one touch. When the urge strikes me, I can just hold down a button, push my chair out of the way, and work standing up. I don’t have to guesstimate what the right height is – I just set it once, and it goes back there every time.

This works wonderfully:

I find myself switching between sitting and standing a couple times per day. When I’m working with clients over video, standing up is so freeing. I even find myself stepping forwards and backwards to use my arms in different ways on the webcam. When I’m working on code or a blog post, I’ll usually sit down. Time to record a quick video? Up it goes.

I’ve even polished my setup so that my cameras and lighting all rise and fall with the desk. (My microphone is on a boom stand on the floor, though – I don’t want my typing/clicking to travel through the microphone stand and affect my audio.)

Reason #2: The Terra Pro has four legs, so the monitors don’t shake. Four legs means more stability, which means no wobbly, shaking monitor screens – even when the desk is raised to a high standing height. I type hard and fast (insert joke here), and it really pisses me off when the monitor shakes.

Monitors in Motion Boa II dual-monitor stand – the black pole in the middle is my microphone boom

I didn’t buy the Terra Pro’s monitor arms – those didn’t get particularly good reviews – and instead I went with a Monitors in Motion Boa II. It’s a super-sturdy two-monitor stand that is machined out of aluminum. I’m not a big fan – it’s sturdy, but it’s not strong enough to hold my 32″ monitor vertically no matter how hard I crank down on the allen bolts. I’ve had to support the monitor with my little Tascam audio recorder, which works, but doesn’t exactly look boss. Would not buy the Boa again.

But hey, on the bright side, no shaking of the monitors whatsoever – even though my office is carpeted.

Reason #3: I’m a sedentary geek. I’m 40, and let’s face it, the more I get up off my lazy ass, the better.

What I Like About the NextDesk Terra Pro

Assembly was easy. Took me maybe thirty minutes by myself, and I’m not exactly known for my mechanical prowess.

The motors are solid. Some afternoons, my little dog Ernie likes to sleep on my lap, so I’ll lower the desk to the seated position, put my feet up on one corner of the desk, put Ernie on my lap, and surf the web and do emails. Because the NextDesk has individual motors in each desk leg, I worried that the uneven distribution of weight would cause problems. Doesn’t seem to.

The “artisan bar” is a good foot rest. I find myself standing with one foot on it all the time. If you’re considering the less expensive Terra desk, don’t bother with the artisan bar because it’s too far at the back of the desk. For the Pro and Air Pro desks, though, it’s awesome.

What I Meh About the NextDesk Terra Pro

Why there’s an extra chair in my office

I keep shuffling my chair mat and my standing mat around. I know, first world problems, but I can’t work for an extended period of time while standing on my chair mat, and I can’t roll my chair around on a cushy standing mat. I end up with my chair mat on the floor, and then whenever I wanna stand, I pull my standing mat on top of it.

Holy cow, the Terra Pro is expensive. I’d held off on this purchase for quite a while because I kept comparing it to a $3,500 laptop – which one would I rather have more? It’s a good desk, don’t get me wrong, and I don’t have a single complaint about how it’s constructed, but it seems like it’s about $1,000 more expensive than it needs to be.

Granted, you can get a base Terra Pro for about $2,700, but you won’t:

Skip these options:

Shipping is way slower than NextDesk says. I’d read reviews saying they promised shipping by day X, and then the pallet actually left the factory weeks later. That happened with mine as well. That wouldn’t be such a big deal if it arrived in a series of small boxes, but it arrives on a pallet carried by a freight truck. That requires a lot more planning for us downtown high-rise dwellers where we can’t just put a pallet on the elevator without building approval.

Bottom line, all things considered: it’s awesome. I love it, and I’d totally buy it again.

Annotated Photo of My Office Gear

Annotated Version

A – BenQ BL3200PT 32″ monitor – really love this. 2560×1440 resolution, USB 3 hub built in.

B – Asus VE248Q 24″ monitor – meh, just alright. Side monitor for Twitter and Hipchat.

C – Coffee.

D – Tascam DR-60MD MKII audio recorder – for better audio on my training videos, I use a professional microphone (Audix SCX1-HC) on a boom stand above my desk. The audio recordings go into the Tascam on SD cards, and then after I finish recording, I merge the Tascam audio, Mac screencast, and GoPro video feeds together using Final Cut Pro.

E – Microsoft Sculpt Bluetooth Ergonomic Keyboard – I don’t need a number pad, and I want the trackpad as near to my hands as possible, so this thing is perfect. Plus I hate wires.

F – Apple Magic Trackpad

G – Audioengine A2+ Monitors – look great, sound great, very compact.

H – LimoStudio photography bulbs in CowboyStudio stands – these bulbs are crazy bright and put out very natural-looking light. Best of all, they’re not hot, so I can leave them on during recording without breaking a sweat.

I – Boom microphone stand with an Audix SCX1-HC microphone mounted above view.

J – Orcas of Queen Charlotte Island by Blaine Billman – print of a very detailed pointillism piece we picked up in Alaska.

K – Peephole #1 and Peephole #3 by Sas Christian – I’ve adored Sas’s work for years, and I’ve slowly built up a little collection of paintings and pencil drawings. These were the first two paintings of hers I bought.

L – Apple MacBook Pro 15″ – the brains of my desk operation, but it’s not actually on my desk. I don’t need access to it since I do everything via the Bluetooth keyboard/trackpad and the monitors, so it’s over on a separate cabinet.

M – Blackmagic Design MultiDock 2 – holds the 1TB SATA SSDs where my work-in-progress training videos go. I used to work off hard drives, but now that I’m using multiple GoPros as cameras, the sheer amount of video files required means I need a lot of fast storage. This plugs directly into one of the MBP’s Thunderbolt ports.

N – Elgato Thunderbold 2 Dock – plugs into the other Thunderbold port and drives my monitors, Ethernet, more USB3 ports, etc.

O – GoPro HERO4 Blacks – I used to use HD camcorders, but I’ve switched to the GoPros for better 4K video and smaller size on my desk. Sounds crazy to record 4K talking head video, but the end result is much better then HD camcorders. I’m using Luxebell Skeleton cases to mount the GoPros on small tripods, plus keep the USB and SD ports exposed.

Not annotated: Herman Miller Aeron chair – bought this back in 2010, and it’s held up extremely well. Get the Forward Tilt option if you’re the kinda person who leans into their work.

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