the backsaver zero-gravity line is not as flashy as the one in TFA but it allows locking the recliner at any angle you want, not just 3 pre-set ones.
A backsaver will run $1000+ new, and the one in the TFA is probably more; if you want to try the idea out you can get a cheap lawn chair version for $65 on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Strathwood-Anti-Gravity-Adjustable-Rec... (I've tried that one too, and IMO it's a great value, although even more limited to "reclined" and "not reclined").
I stopped coding in a recliner since it was too hard to add a 30" monitor to the setup in a cubicle environment.
At the risk of commenting on a piece of furniture I'll never try, I think there should be a clear divide between where you work and where you relax. Ideally, I'd like to be in a comfortable, ergonomic chair (like the Mirra I recently bought) when I work and then take a nap on the couch. When I get tired, I want to get up, disengage from my work and let my body (and brain) relax. The concept of taking a nap in my chair seems strange to me.
I can see the appeal of being able to recline while contemplating something but as a person who almost instantly falls asleep when horizontal, I wouldn't get much contemplation done.
I wonder if this chair is VaporWare, I've seen a bunch of posts just like this one obviously only are based on a press release. I've so far found not a single link to someone who's actually tried it.
I think my ideal chair would be a treadmill: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treadmill_Desk . Being able to walk a couple miles every hour would definitely increase my energy level and focus.
The chair is nice and interesting, but it's good only for relaxation, not for working. I don't know how many people could work, or better said type, while laying on their back. Also, I prefer laying on a bed or a couch.
I've had a dream, for years, of buying a La-Z-Boy, the Datahand keyboard, and either mounting a monitor on the ceiling or getting some really good resolution video goggles.
After mounting half the datahand on each arm of the easy chair, and reclining, I figure I'd have reached the ultimate nirvana of ergonomic computing. Unfortunately, I'm still a long way from being rich enough to justify dropping $1K on a friggin' keyboard.
heh. but programming on a laptop in a chair with armrests can be frustrating (i have a beanbag in the corner of my office that's perhaps a better candidate for best programming chair ever...)
I dunno, my girlfriend is an occupational therapist, she would probably have a mental breakdown about how unergonomic this chair would be to use with your workstation.
I had Aeron at office and didn't like it that much...
sure you can customize it every imaginable way, still it's conservative and quite static chair, and it wasn't that comfortable for really long hacking sessions
the backsaver zero-gravity line is not as flashy as the one in TFA but it allows locking the recliner at any angle you want, not just 3 pre-set ones.
A backsaver will run $1000+ new, and the one in the TFA is probably more; if you want to try the idea out you can get a cheap lawn chair version for $65 on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Strathwood-Anti-Gravity-Adjustable-Rec... (I've tried that one too, and IMO it's a great value, although even more limited to "reclined" and "not reclined").
I stopped coding in a recliner since it was too hard to add a 30" monitor to the setup in a cubicle environment.