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Dealing with Posture Problems?

WebfishUK asks: "Musculo-skeletal problems (such as back pain) affect most computer users sooner or later. Like others I spend many hours sat in front of a computer and wonder what the long-term health implications will be. I recently came across a website for an application called Posture Minder which apparently runs in the background and uses your web-cam to monitor how you are sitting and warn you about bad posture habits. It sounds like a neat idea (prevention being the best cure and all that), although the website doesn't have a download. Do Slashdot readers have other devices or any habits that they have adopted to mitigate the health risks of spending a lot of time in front of a computer?"

2 of 125 comments (clear)

  1. Much simpler... by cp.tar · · Score: 4, Informative

    I dumped my 18-year-old chair (one of the wheels is broken anyway) in favour of a pilates ball.

    It's way more fun and forces you to keep your back straight.

    And you can bounce on it while waiting for something slow to complete.

    Good for sex, too; my gf says it feels like floating.

    --
    Ignore this signature. By order.
  2. excercise helps by dotmax · · Score: 5, Informative

    I've spent twenty years working in the control rooms of various particle accelerator facilities. I earn my money by sitting on my ass, using a keyboard, mouse and trackball and staring at a bank of monitors.

    i find that almost any kind of upper body excercise helps a lot. I live next to a river, so i kayak regularly -- it really helps keep the musculo-skeletal parts all tweaked up. Juggling is good. I imagine climbing, basketball etc help too. Bicycling is almost useless (i ride a lot, it's just not good for upper back problems). Unicycling is way good. :-) Some of my collegues like to lift.

    There's only so much posture / workstation ergonomics can do for you. Excercise is the real key. .max