Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I tried it out at Office Depot. It was raelly comfortable after I raised the back so the lumbar was in the right place.
Is there anyway to set it so you can recline only halfway?
Did you screw with the controls and get it perfect? Just wondering how much better it would be if I had it at home and could get all the adjustments just right.
I don't know if you saw this, but this may be what you are looking for:
http://lib.store.yahoo.net/lib/thehumansolution/fabrixb.html
http://www.thehumansolution.com/ergohumancustomhi.html
get a cheap leather chair and buy one of those portable back support things that can massage and vibrate... way better than the 500$ ergonomic chairs we have at work
Oh yeah, a lot of different colors of mesh on their site.
If you notice though, on the page I linked with the colors, the top 4 or 5 are mesh colors. Check the zoom in, looks like they are mesh?
I'm not going to lie, that can be comfortable. But when you sit in one of the high-end chairs like the ergohuman you will feel the difference. I only sat in it for a few minutes but it feels like you are floating, not sitting. And it supports your back and neck at the perfect spots. Im 90% sure I'm going to blow the $500 on one.
Besides, a headrest only comes into play when the chair's occupant is leaning far back, which doesn't paint a pretty picture in an era when top executives want to be seen as forward-facing hard- chargers. Then again, there are those moments when even the Type A president or chairman of the board could use a little R&R.
The Raynor Group's Jeff McQueen concedes that the headrest on the Ergohuman chair isn't technically essential to its function; after all, in the relatively low-traffic private sanctums of most CEOs, there isn't much danger of whiplash. "It's more of an executive feature," McQueen says. "It just looks better in an executive office."
Herman Miller draws the line at headrests, however. "They're kind of a vanity feature that doesn't really serve the customer," Otteman says. "We don't go there."