
A Korean student designed the perfect WFH desk for small apartments, and I hope Samsung now teams up with him
One upward push turns your monitor into wall art instantly
DuoShift replaces notifications with a physical, deliberate end-of-day gesture
Compact apartments finally get a desk built for two lives
Compact living spaces have made it increasingly difficult for people to separate their professional and personal lives within the same four walls.
Seung Bin Bae, a Korean student designer, has created a dual-purpose workstation called DuoShift aimed at fixing one of remote work's most persistent problems.
DuoShift addresses this issue through a single physical motion rather than relying on software, apps, or scheduled reminders.
A single motion replaces years of software fixes
The desk operates in two distinct modes, the Work Mode and Life Mode, and switching between them only needs an upward shift of the screen.
In Work Mode, it functions as a standard productivity monitor, holding spreadsheets, browser tabs, and video calls during the day.
Pushing the screen upward shifts it into Life Mode, where it becomes a digital art frame instead.
This transformation simultaneously clears the desk surface beneath it, returning the space to non-work use entirely.
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Unlike calendar apps or notification systems that attempt to impose discipline through software, DuoShift relies on a deliberate physical gesture to mark the day's end.
Bae's approach treats this transition as a ritual, similar to closing a laptop or changing out of work clothes after finishing a shift.
Visually, the design remains minimal and slim, intended to integrate into a living space rather than dominate it visually.
Why this matters beyond the desk itself
Compact urban living continues to expand rather than recede, and remote work remains common years after the pandemic reshaped daily routines.
Most monitor designs have not adapted to treat this overlap between living and working as a serious design problem.
DuoShift's customizable frame finishes also allow it to either blend into a room's interior or stand out as a deliberate design object.
Beyond its function, the product hints at commercial possibilities, including digital art subscriptions or collaborations with furniture and interior design brands.
Its modular structure additionally permits upgrades without full replacement, a detail aimed at reducing electronic waste and extending product lifespan over time.
As compelling as the concept is, it remains a student project without the manufacturing scale needed to reach a global audience.
Samsung, as one of South Korea's most powerful electronics brands, could realistically turn this idea into a mass-market product.
Without backing from a company of that size, an innovation this promising risks staying confined within South Korea's borders.
The project was named an Honoree in the Home & Living category at the Core77 Design Awards.
Whether the concept could scale into mass production through a partnership remains an open and unanswered question.
What DuoShift demonstrates, regardless of its commercial future, is that a single deliberate gesture can offer something software has consistently struggled to provide.
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Efosa has been writing about technology for over 7 years, initially driven by curiosity but now fueled by a strong passion for the field. He holds both a Master's and a PhD in sciences, which provided him with a solid foundation in analytical thinking.
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