Zenlorix
Practical, editorially independent guidance on home office design and remote work productivity, written specifically for Canadians.
What Zenlorix Covers
Zenlorix focuses on the practical dimensions of remote work — the physical setup of a home office, the daily habits that sustain productive remote careers, and the ergonomic considerations that determine whether working from home is comfortable over months and years, not just weeks.
The content is written for workers who are new to remote arrangements and for those who have been working from home for years but have not systematically addressed the quality of their setup. Articles draw on publicly available research, Canadian government guidance (including from Statistics Canada, the Canada Revenue Agency's home office expense guidelines, and provincial workplace health bodies), and established ergonomics frameworks.
Zenlorix does not accept advertising and does not promote specific products or services. Where equipment categories are discussed, the aim is to describe function and selection criteria rather than to endorse particular brands or retailers.
Editorial Approach
Articles are written in plain, informative language, following a descriptive rather than prescriptive style. The intent is to present relevant information clearly and allow readers to make their own decisions based on their specific circumstances. Canada's geographic diversity — from high-density urban cores to rural and northern communities — means that no single approach applies universally, and the articles attempt to account for variation where it is meaningful.
All factual claims reference publicly available sources. Where precise data is not available, articles use appropriately qualified language rather than invented figures. No statistics, studies, or organisations are referenced unless they are verifiably real and publicly accessible.
Coverage Areas
The three core areas of coverage are workspace setup (the physical and technical elements of a home office), daily routines (the scheduling and habit practices that maintain remote productivity), and ergonomics (the physical setup of a workstation to reduce fatigue and musculoskeletal stress).
Articles are updated when practices, standards, or the Canadian remote work landscape change materially. Publication dates and most recent update dates are noted on each article.
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Published Content
Setting Up Your Home Office: A Practical Guide for Remote Workers in Canada
Room selection, desk positioning, internet requirements, and seasonal considerations for Canadian homes.
Daily Routines That Keep Remote Workers Focused Across Canadian Time Zones
Morning transitions, time-blocking, meeting scheduling across provinces, and end-of-day rituals.
Ergonomics and Equipment: How to Set Up a Home Workstation That Supports Your Health
Chair setup, monitor positioning, keyboard ergonomics, eye strain, and lighting for home offices.