[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":429},["ShallowReactive",2],{"footer-primary":3,"footer-secondary":93,"footer-description":119,"whats-in-your-dock-cassidoo":121,"whats-in-your-dock-cassidoo-next":161,"sales-reps":177},{"items":4},[5,29,49,69],{"id":6,"title":7,"url":8,"page":8,"children":9},"522e608a-77b0-4333-820d-d4f44be2ade1","Solutions",null,[10,15,20,25],{"id":11,"title":12,"url":8,"page":13},"fcafe85a-a798-4710-9e7a-776fe413aae5","Headless CMS",{"permalink":14},"/solutions/headless-cms",{"id":16,"title":17,"url":8,"page":18},"79972923-93cf-4777-9e32-5c9b0315fc10","Backend-as-a-Service",{"permalink":19},"/solutions/backend-as-a-service",{"id":21,"title":22,"url":8,"page":23},"0fa8d0c1-7b64-4f6f-939d-d7fdb99fc407","Product Information",{"permalink":24},"/solutions/product-information-management",{"id":26,"title":27,"url":28,"page":8},"63946d54-6052-4780-8ff4-91f5a9931dcc","100+ Things to Build","https://directus.io/blog/100-tools-apps-and-platforms-you-can-build-with-directus",{"id":30,"title":31,"url":8,"page":8,"children":32},"8ab4f9b1-f3e2-44d6-919b-011d91fe072f","Resources",[33,37,41,45],{"id":34,"title":35,"url":36,"page":8},"f951fb84-8777-4b84-9e91-996fe9d25483","Documentation","https://docs.directus.io",{"id":38,"title":39,"url":40,"page":8},"366febc7-a538-4c08-a326-e6204957f1e3","Guides","https://docs.directus.io/guides/",{"id":42,"title":43,"url":44,"page":8},"aeb9128e-1c5f-417f-863c-2449416433cd","Community","https://directus.chat",{"id":46,"title":47,"url":48,"page":8},"da1c2ed8-0a77-49b0-a903-49c56cb07de5","Release Notes","https://github.com/directus/directus/releases",{"id":50,"title":51,"url":8,"page":8,"children":52},"d61fae8c-7502-494a-822f-19ecff3d0256","Support",[53,57,61,65],{"id":54,"title":55,"url":56,"page":8},"8c43c781-7ebd-475f-a931-747e293c0a88","Issue Tracker","https://github.com/directus/directus/issues",{"id":58,"title":59,"url":60,"page":8},"d77bb78e-cf7b-4e01-932a-514414ba49d3","Feature Requests","https://github.com/directus/directus/discussions?discussions_q=is:open+sort:top",{"id":62,"title":63,"url":64,"page":8},"4346be2b-2c53-476e-b53b-becacec626a6","Community Chat","https://discord.com/channels/725371605378924594/741317677397704757",{"id":66,"title":67,"url":68,"page":8},"26c115d2-49f7-4edc-935e-d37d427fb89d","Cloud Dashboard","https://directus.cloud",{"id":70,"title":71,"url":8,"page":8,"children":72},"49141403-4f20-44ac-8453-25ace1265812","Organization",[73,78,84,88],{"id":74,"title":75,"url":76,"page":77},"1f36ea92-8a5e-47c8-914c-9822a8b9538a","About","/about",{"permalink":76},{"id":79,"title":80,"url":81,"page":82},"b84bf525-5471-4b14-a93c-225f6c386005","Careers","#",{"permalink":83},"/careers",{"id":85,"title":86,"url":87,"page":8},"86aabc3a-433d-434b-9efa-ad1d34be0a34","Brand Assets","https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1lBOTba4RaA5ikqOn8Ewo4RYzD0XcymG9?usp=sharing",{"id":89,"title":90,"url":8,"page":91},"8d2fa1e3-198e-4405-81e1-2ceb858bc237","Contact",{"permalink":92},"/contact",{"items":94},[95,101,107,113],{"id":96,"title":97,"url":8,"page":98,"children":100},"8a1b7bfa-429d-4ffc-a650-2a5fdcf356da","Cloud Policies",{"permalink":99},"/cloud-policies",[],{"id":102,"title":103,"url":81,"page":104,"children":106},"bea848ef-828f-4306-8017-6b00ec5d4a0c","License",{"permalink":105},"/bsl",[],{"id":108,"title":109,"url":81,"page":110,"children":112},"4e914f47-4bee-42b7-b445-3119ee4196ef","Terms",{"permalink":111},"/terms",[],{"id":114,"title":115,"url":81,"page":116,"children":118},"ea69eda6-d317-4981-8421-fcabb1826bfd","Privacy",{"permalink":117},"/privacy",[],{"description":120},"\u003Cp>A composable backend to build your Headless CMS, BaaS, and more.&nbsp;\u003C/p>",{"id":122,"slug":123,"vimeo_id":124,"description":125,"tile":126,"length":127,"resources":8,"people":128,"episode_number":132,"published":133,"title":134,"video_transcript_html":135,"video_transcript_text":136,"content":8,"status":137,"episode_people":138,"recommendations":149,"season":150,"seo":8},"5ae26e77-6584-426a-a247-fd1662e268bd","cassidoo","922118393","Cassidy is a software engineer, advisor, developer advocate, investor, and memer on the internet, and here's the software, hardware, and analog tools she uses in her day-to-day.","55fd96f5-dde0-4c11-b869-66cbabc3fc94",5,[129],{"name":130,"url":131},"Cassidy Williams","https://cassidoo.co/",1,"2024-03-12","What's In Your Dock, Cassidy?","\u003Cp>Speaker 0: Hi. My name is Cassidy and I'm a software engineer, advisor, developer advocate, investor, and mimer on the Internet and this is what's in my doc. So firstly, for my devices, I use a custom built Windows PC where I hodgepodge together all of the different parts as time goes on. A 2021 MacBook Pro and a 2018 iPad Pro. My day to day involves a lot of coding, meetings, and general writing.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>For coding, I use Versus Code. I do also use Vim but the extensions in Versus Code are so good, I use it for most things. For bookmarks, I use Raindrop. Raindrop is great for saving things I want to read. I get full text search of all the things that I'm saving and I can just save it across all devices.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>For task tracking, I use to do meter which is actually an app that I built myself. It's just a to do list but you can pause tasks for later and it has a progress bar. And I like gamifying things and the progress bar is really great. For flow state style work, I really like to use the Suka. It's a really great app that yells at you if you get a little bit off track and it also has flow state music, task tracking and a bunch of other just nice things to keep you accountable.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>I also use Dabble Me for journaling, which it just emails you every single day saying how was your day and I can quickly respond. And it's nice to have something that kind of prompts you easily, and then it just saves it for you. And then it also reminds you what you wrote a long time ago. But if there's one tool that I couldn't live without, it's probably Obsidian. It's honestly a glorified markdown editor, but it has so much more than that.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Because beyond just editing markdown files and saving it to your computer, it has a plugin system that's open and I've added so many plugins that it's just nice things where for example, you can add Kanban boards to set up project management. It has a data view where you can query your notes as if it's like an SQL database, but it's just your notes. It has templates where, for example, when I write my newsletter, I can have a newsletter template. Or when I wanna write a blog, I have a blog template. And it just has all of the structure built in.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>It has a graph view so you can see how your notes are together. And then you can also backlink between your notes. And so it creates a sort of wiki for all of your notes together. It's a really really powerful piece of software that I truly use every day for most things. For brain storming, I use a tool called Brain Story.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Now full disclosure, it's something that my team built but it's a tool that helps you think through your ideas and get feedback on them. It's not generative AI but it's really great for just talking out a side project, a talk, a blog post, anything that you want to think a little bit more about and get feedback on. I listen to a lot of show tunes. I just love it when people are belting. And I like to think that I can belt with them even though I can't.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>But it's really fun to listen to that while I'm coding. It feels powerful. But if I really need to focus, it's much more like spacey lo fi type thing so I don't pay attention to the music. I have a bunch of hardware on my desk. Keyboards are probably the main one that I could talk about where I have a bunch of custom mechanical keyboards.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>I have some behind me. I've got a bunch all over the place. And I really love building them and just kind of rotating out which keyboard I use day to day. But besides that I have some speakers when I'm really just playing loud music. I've got a shure mv7 microphone and I have a Sony a61100 as my camera.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>I really love laser cutting and kind of crafting making cool things. And I play a lot of guitar as well and really like to arrange some music. And so for laser cutting, I use a tool called Affinity Designer that lets me edit vectors and then put them into a machine. And then I use a tool called the guitar pro for arranging and reading guitar music. I have a notebook with me at all times where I just kind of write and sketch out little ideas where I don't wanna pull out some kind of diagramming software.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>And I just wanna say here's where this goes over here and just kind of planning out something a bit more visually. And that is the software, hardware, and analog tools that I use. You can find me on the internet at cassid00, c a s s I d o o on most things, and I look forward to seeing you on the internet. Bye.\u003C/p>","Hi. My name is Cassidy and I'm a software engineer, advisor, developer advocate, investor, and mimer on the Internet and this is what's in my doc. So firstly, for my devices, I use a custom built Windows PC where I hodgepodge together all of the different parts as time goes on. A 2021 MacBook Pro and a 2018 iPad Pro. My day to day involves a lot of coding, meetings, and general writing. For coding, I use Versus Code. I do also use Vim but the extensions in Versus Code are so good, I use it for most things. For bookmarks, I use Raindrop. Raindrop is great for saving things I want to read. I get full text search of all the things that I'm saving and I can just save it across all devices. For task tracking, I use to do meter which is actually an app that I built myself. It's just a to do list but you can pause tasks for later and it has a progress bar. And I like gamifying things and the progress bar is really great. For flow state style work, I really like to use the Suka. It's a really great app that yells at you if you get a little bit off track and it also has flow state music, task tracking and a bunch of other just nice things to keep you accountable. I also use Dabble Me for journaling, which it just emails you every single day saying how was your day and I can quickly respond. And it's nice to have something that kind of prompts you easily, and then it just saves it for you. And then it also reminds you what you wrote a long time ago. But if there's one tool that I couldn't live without, it's probably Obsidian. It's honestly a glorified markdown editor, but it has so much more than that. Because beyond just editing markdown files and saving it to your computer, it has a plugin system that's open and I've added so many plugins that it's just nice things where for example, you can add Kanban boards to set up project management. It has a data view where you can query your notes as if it's like an SQL database, but it's just your notes. It has templates where, for example, when I write my newsletter, I can have a newsletter template. Or when I wanna write a blog, I have a blog template. And it just has all of the structure built in. It has a graph view so you can see how your notes are together. And then you can also backlink between your notes. And so it creates a sort of wiki for all of your notes together. It's a really really powerful piece of software that I truly use every day for most things. For brain storming, I use a tool called Brain Story. Now full disclosure, it's something that my team built but it's a tool that helps you think through your ideas and get feedback on them. It's not generative AI but it's really great for just talking out a side project, a talk, a blog post, anything that you want to think a little bit more about and get feedback on. I listen to a lot of show tunes. I just love it when people are belting. And I like to think that I can belt with them even though I can't. But it's really fun to listen to that while I'm coding. It feels powerful. But if I really need to focus, it's much more like spacey lo fi type thing so I don't pay attention to the music. I have a bunch of hardware on my desk. Keyboards are probably the main one that I could talk about where I have a bunch of custom mechanical keyboards. I have some behind me. I've got a bunch all over the place. And I really love building them and just kind of rotating out which keyboard I use day to day. But besides that I have some speakers when I'm really just playing loud music. I've got a shure mv7 microphone and I have a Sony a61100 as my camera. I really love laser cutting and kind of crafting making cool things. And I play a lot of guitar as well and really like to arrange some music. And so for laser cutting, I use a tool called Affinity Designer that lets me edit vectors and then put them into a machine. And then I use a tool called the guitar pro for arranging and reading guitar music. I have a notebook with me at all times where I just kind of write and sketch out little ideas where I don't wanna pull out some kind of diagramming software. And I just wanna say here's where this goes over here and just kind of planning out something a bit more visually. And that is the software, hardware, and analog tools that I use. You can find me on the internet at cassid00, c a s s I d o o on most things, and I look forward to seeing you on the internet. Bye.","published",[139],{"people_id":140},{"id":141,"first_name":142,"last_name":143,"avatar":144,"bio":145,"links":146},"d6938875-b424-490d-8f42-1cd0d71e53be","Cassidy","Williams","0344f15a-e5ba-4492-92a4-37f22ba2f546","CTO at Contenda",[147],{"url":131,"service":148},"website",[],{"id":151,"number":132,"year":152,"episodes":153,"show":158},"9e8684b4-074a-4048-8e0d-643433c81c21","2024",[122,154,155,156,157],"1c7a9c6b-a089-4919-a4c4-b6aef92c7652","02770b60-b4da-447c-9e9d-c59f5b63bab0","38e774bc-6f05-4dda-8b31-9e228f90d59d","d4c02199-f747-4349-bc56-d4a277ae50fd",{"title":159,"tile":160},"What's In Your Dock","8dba05fa-504f-4abc-865f-174d07fac140",{"id":162,"slug":163,"season":164,"vimeo_id":165,"description":166,"tile":167,"length":168,"resources":8,"people":8,"episode_number":132,"published":169,"title":170,"video_transcript_html":171,"video_transcript_text":172,"content":8,"seo":173,"status":137,"episode_people":174,"recommendations":176},"493e8e9a-433c-4c33-9d79-cec59ec20391","rijk","3310777b-2774-4ba9-80d5-7c96c566aa10","1007792087","Rijk is a developer and designer born and raised in the Netherlands. He first came to America to work on Directus where he is CTO to this day. When not coding you can find him playing bass in the Lower East Side or hanging out with his cats in Brooklyn. Coder-designer by nature, musician at heart; prefers code to be indented in threes. ","145ec186-e959-460e-88a6-e22c11ef1e15",7,"2024-09-09","What's in your Dock, Rijk?","\u003Cp>Speaker 0: Hey. How's it going? So for my daily devices, I use a MacBook Pro in 2021, an iPad Pro, and an iPhone 15 Pro Max. Most of my day to day consists of a split between, you know, doing a lot of meetings, programming, and a bit of design on the side. For those meetings, I use a Sony Alpha s 6,400 with a 16 mil Sigma prime lens.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>I do have an Elgato prompter to make it look like I'm looking at you instead of a screen off to the side, and I use a Blue Yeti mic, a Yeti x. I also use a Logi Lytra glow for a little bit of extra light. And when the meetings are a little bit less interesting, I have a little Tetris micro cart on my desk, off screen. Don't tell anyone. When it comes to software, let's take a look at the dock left to right first.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>First and foremost, I use Arc as a browser. I'm the type of person that doesn't really do more than five taps open at a time or I'm losing my mind. So Arc's organization tools for renaming tabs, making folders, having spaces has really been a game changer for my productivity in that space. Although, I do have to admit, tabs that go to a different space go there to die and then get deleted anyways after a long while. For the basic Smell calendar reminders, I use the Apple standard apps.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>I have tried every new calendar app that comes out. I love experimenting with them. But at the end of the day, I always find myself coming back to the default ones as they basically do what I need them to do and nothing more. Right? They're very pleasing.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>At Directus, we use Notion for note taking. In meetings, we have a bunch of different teams and a bunch of documents. It's a bit unstructured, but that's kind of the beauty of Notion. And we use Linear for task management. So Linear, think of it as GitHub Issues as a separate app, which has really elevated our productivity in the especially the product team.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Then we use Slack for communication with the team internally, and we use Discord for communication with the larger community of users, of Triactus. When I'm programming, I similarly to calendar apps. I've tried, various different apps. I recently tried Zed. I've been using some of the JetBrains stuff.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>I've been on Coda two way back in the day when that was a thing. I've tried Nova. I always come back to Versus Code for the last couple of years. I've set that up very customized. I'm one of the the weird ones that does it in light mode, with a three tap space setting.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>And I use iTerm on the side because I cannot deal with the built in terminal. Just a personal preference thing. For debugging databases, I'm a huge fan of TablePlus. So TablePlus is kind of PHPMyAdmin as a native app, but they support effectively every database under the sun, which is very, very nice. You have to learn the tool once, and then you can just use it, which is great for raw database management, so direct, you know, columns or insertions into databases.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>On the flip side of that, I used RapidAPI, previously known as Paul, as an API debugging tool. So it's kind of similar to Postman or Hopscotch or some of those tools, but as a magnated app. I'm still a UX designer at heart, so apps looking nice is a huge reason for me to use them over something else. Then we use Figma for all the design files. I am a very big fan of FigJam as well for quick notes and figuring out projects and doing more product design, or user experience design.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>And then last but not least, we have Reader and Ivory. So Reader is an RSS feed reader. I use that to stay up to date with a bunch of blogs and personal blogs that I like to follow for any news in the tech industry or improvements to the web platform or any other interesting developments. And I use Ivory as my client for the Vedaverse. So I'm part of the Fostodon server right now, and I try to follow, again, interesting people on the Internet.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>And then last but not least, on the doctor's Spotify, I always got music playing. I mostly listen to everything is what I'm realizing now. There's there's a lot of pop funky stuff in there. There's a lot of alt rock in there, and there's a lot of a little bit of pop sometimes if I just want to focus a little bit and not care about music. Sometimes, I have my own stuff on repeat to get the numbers up, because you gotta game the system a little bit.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Outside of the dock, I am a huge fan of a new app that just came out from Syndra called Scratchpad, which is just a little icon in your menu bar. The only thing it does is it just opens a tiny note, and it goes away when you click it again. So it's just great for a quick, in the middle of a meeting, I have to jot something down. I don't know where it goes. I need to have something to write in within a split second.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Fantastic for that. I use 1Password for all of the password management. Couldn't do without. Use CleanShot for screenshots and screen recordings. Highly recommend that one.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>That is one I cannot do without nowadays. And then the main thing that I install on every machine every time is called Paste. So it's a clipboard manager, similar to the reasoning behind Repit API. It's a MEC native thing. It feels like it was designed by Apple, and I'm sure they get shirts at some point, and I'd be sad when that happens.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>To write. What else? What else do we have here? Oh, yeah. So the the the hobby stops.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Sorry. Outside of work, I like to write and play a lot of music. So one thing I have right off at my desk here is just there's an acoustic guitar sitting ready to go in a demo at any moment. You see, of course, you know, some guitars on the wall. There's there's too many in my apartment here.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>For that, on the computer, I use Logic Pro to record through my, line six HX stomp XL as an interface. And other than that what do we got going on in here? Oh, yeah. Less little desk gadgets. I brought it up.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>Before, I have a little Tetris micro card. I don't know if they still make them, but this this gets used a little bit too much in the day. Great way to take a little break. I have an analog Nixie clock sitting here on my desk as a way to keep the time, as if that's not a thing on my computer. And one sort of guilty pleasure that I thought it was gonna be stupid, but I cannot do without nowadays, is an ember mug.\u003C/p>\u003Cp>They're the most again, when I when I bought it, I thought it was gonna be stupid as hell, and now I'm hooked. So recommend one of those as well. I have a little, Belkin wireless charger to prop my phone up and, Sonos on the desk for all of the music that I previously mentioned. And I think that's everything I have around me.\u003C/p>","Hey. How's it going? So for my daily devices, I use a MacBook Pro in 2021, an iPad Pro, and an iPhone 15 Pro Max. Most of my day to day consists of a split between, you know, doing a lot of meetings, programming, and a bit of design on the side. For those meetings, I use a Sony Alpha s 6,400 with a 16 mil Sigma prime lens. I do have an Elgato prompter to make it look like I'm looking at you instead of a screen off to the side, and I use a Blue Yeti mic, a Yeti x. I also use a Logi Lytra glow for a little bit of extra light. And when the meetings are a little bit less interesting, I have a little Tetris micro cart on my desk, off screen. Don't tell anyone. When it comes to software, let's take a look at the dock left to right first. First and foremost, I use Arc as a browser. I'm the type of person that doesn't really do more than five taps open at a time or I'm losing my mind. So Arc's organization tools for renaming tabs, making folders, having spaces has really been a game changer for my productivity in that space. Although, I do have to admit, tabs that go to a different space go there to die and then get deleted anyways after a long while. For the basic Smell calendar reminders, I use the Apple standard apps. I have tried every new calendar app that comes out. I love experimenting with them. But at the end of the day, I always find myself coming back to the default ones as they basically do what I need them to do and nothing more. Right? They're very pleasing. At Directus, we use Notion for note taking. In meetings, we have a bunch of different teams and a bunch of documents. It's a bit unstructured, but that's kind of the beauty of Notion. And we use Linear for task management. So Linear, think of it as GitHub Issues as a separate app, which has really elevated our productivity in the especially the product team. Then we use Slack for communication with the team internally, and we use Discord for communication with the larger community of users, of Triactus. When I'm programming, I similarly to calendar apps. I've tried, various different apps. I recently tried Zed. I've been using some of the JetBrains stuff. I've been on Coda two way back in the day when that was a thing. I've tried Nova. I always come back to Versus Code for the last couple of years. I've set that up very customized. I'm one of the the weird ones that does it in light mode, with a three tap space setting. And I use iTerm on the side because I cannot deal with the built in terminal. Just a personal preference thing. For debugging databases, I'm a huge fan of TablePlus. So TablePlus is kind of PHPMyAdmin as a native app, but they support effectively every database under the sun, which is very, very nice. You have to learn the tool once, and then you can just use it, which is great for raw database management, so direct, you know, columns or insertions into databases. On the flip side of that, I used RapidAPI, previously known as Paul, as an API debugging tool. So it's kind of similar to Postman or Hopscotch or some of those tools, but as a magnated app. I'm still a UX designer at heart, so apps looking nice is a huge reason for me to use them over something else. Then we use Figma for all the design files. I am a very big fan of FigJam as well for quick notes and figuring out projects and doing more product design, or user experience design. And then last but not least, we have Reader and Ivory. So Reader is an RSS feed reader. I use that to stay up to date with a bunch of blogs and personal blogs that I like to follow for any news in the tech industry or improvements to the web platform or any other interesting developments. And I use Ivory as my client for the Vedaverse. So I'm part of the Fostodon server right now, and I try to follow, again, interesting people on the Internet. And then last but not least, on the doctor's Spotify, I always got music playing. I mostly listen to everything is what I'm realizing now. There's there's a lot of pop funky stuff in there. There's a lot of alt rock in there, and there's a lot of a little bit of pop sometimes if I just want to focus a little bit and not care about music. Sometimes, I have my own stuff on repeat to get the numbers up, because you gotta game the system a little bit. Outside of the dock, I am a huge fan of a new app that just came out from Syndra called Scratchpad, which is just a little icon in your menu bar. The only thing it does is it just opens a tiny note, and it goes away when you click it again. So it's just great for a quick, in the middle of a meeting, I have to jot something down. I don't know where it goes. I need to have something to write in within a split second. Fantastic for that. I use 1Password for all of the password management. Couldn't do without. Use CleanShot for screenshots and screen recordings. Highly recommend that one. That is one I cannot do without nowadays. And then the main thing that I install on every machine every time is called Paste. So it's a clipboard manager, similar to the reasoning behind Repit API. It's a MEC native thing. It feels like it was designed by Apple, and I'm sure they get shirts at some point, and I'd be sad when that happens. To write. What else? What else do we have here? Oh, yeah. So the the the hobby stops. Sorry. Outside of work, I like to write and play a lot of music. So one thing I have right off at my desk here is just there's an acoustic guitar sitting ready to go in a demo at any moment. You see, of course, you know, some guitars on the wall. There's there's too many in my apartment here. For that, on the computer, I use Logic Pro to record through my, line six HX stomp XL as an interface. And other than that what do we got going on in here? Oh, yeah. Less little desk gadgets. I brought it up. Before, I have a little Tetris micro card. I don't know if they still make them, but this this gets used a little bit too much in the day. Great way to take a little break. I have an analog Nixie clock sitting here on my desk as a way to keep the time, as if that's not a thing on my computer. And one sort of guilty pleasure that I thought it was gonna be stupid, but I cannot do without nowadays, is an ember mug. They're the most again, when I when I bought it, I thought it was gonna be stupid as hell, and now I'm hooked. So recommend one of those as well. I have a little, Belkin wireless charger to prop my phone up and, Sonos on the desk for all of the music that I previously mentioned. 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