Finally, Herman Miller Released a Good-Looking Desk With Gamers in Mind
Briefly

Finally, Herman Miller Released a Good-Looking Desk With Gamers in Mind
Herman Miller introduces the Coyl, a sit-to-stand desk designed from the ground up for long gaming sessions and easier cable management. The desk includes a headphone hook, a built-in power cable, and a rotary dial for manual height adjustment with greater precision. Finishes are available in black, white, ash, or walnut wood, with legs matched in black or white depending on the selected color. The desk’s name comes from a bright red coiled power cable that can be taught without straining while remaining concealed. Compared with the Motia’s one-touch motor controls, the Coyl uses dial-based controls intended to feel more natural and make exact height locking easier.
"Today, it takes another leap with a new gaming desk-the first of its kind from the legacy brand. The Coyl is the brand new sit-to-stand desk from Herman Miller. It comes equipped with a headphone hook, a built-in power cable, and a rotary dial to let users manually adjust the height. It is, as expected, perfectly designed."
"Herman Miller called it's previous sit-to-stand desk, the Motia, a gaming desk, but that felt more marketing a desk it already had. The Coyl is a correction. It's the first designed from the ground-up to support long sessions and easy cable management. It's ergonomic, and modular if you buy the right parts, hitting all the buzzwords I'm looking for when shopping for gaming desks."
"The name Coyl is a reference to the bright red coiled power cable that is the defining design feature of the desk. It's not just striking (yes, the red is sick), but the coil serves a vital function, allowing the cable to be taught without straining, while still easily concealed and tucked away. The real revolution is the rotary dial."
"Instead of the one-touch motor of the Motia, the Coyl presents controls that are supposed to feel more natural while allowing for even greater precision. This will make locking into an exact height easier than oth"
Read at Esquire
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]