The maker of Silicon Valley's iconic desk chair wants to track when you're at your desk

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Herman Miller

Herman Miller's Aeron chair is a fixture in high-tech work environments.

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When it launched in 1994, it looked different from other office furniture - engineered, not designed, according to Wired. Startups and even big tech CEOs like Mark Zuckerberg swear by it.

Now Herman Miller is trying to transform the rest of the workspace to be as high-tech as its office chairs. It announced a new set of smart office furniture on Monday that uses sensors to relay exactly how a workspace is being used.

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Those sensors send data to software called Live OS, which can display on a dashboard exactly how much time people are spending on their desks, if they're getting up to stand and move around, or just which desks are currently in use.

That can be extremely useful for startups and other high-tech companies that don't assign every worker a personal desk.

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Herman Miller will sell Live OS sensors separately, for around $100, to retrofit existing furniture. But the system really starts to shine when an office is equipped with the company's new standing desk. Through an app, workers can set preferences for their desk's preferred height, or reminders to stand and change positions.

Running these sensors don't come cheap - the software to run them costs about $36 per desk per year, according to Quartz. Part of that is the cost of hooking the sensors up to a cellular network. But for a company that has its eyes set on an efficient, quantified office, they might be just what an office manager is looking for.

Check out how Herman Miller's new high-tech furniture works in pictures: