Weekly News Digest: Desk Crumbs, RGB Chairs, and Dental VR
Digest updates
The June 28 digest should cover June 21 through June 27, not drift into backlog archaeology or tutorial sludge. This week’s eligible pool is still mostly Logitech with two Razer product drops stapled on, so the cleanest version is a five-item batch that keeps the window correct and the brand repetition slightly less embarrassing.
Logitech Turns Desk Crumbs Into Keyboard Triage
Logitech spent June 22 warning remote workers that lunch at the desk is slowly turning their keyboards into grease traps. The advice is sensible enough, but it is still funny to watch a peripheral company turn burrito crumbs into a small workplace-crisis genre.
Logitech Finds a Genuinely Useful Accessibility Story
The best Logitech item this week is an accessibility project called Access Ring, built around MX devices to make mouse clicking easier for people with motor impairments. It is still wrapped in DevStudio self-promotion, but at least there is a real problem and an actual tool underneath the brand glow.
Logitech Turns MX Ink Into Dental School Hardware
Logitech also highlighted DentiXR, a DevStudio project that uses the MX Ink stylus for dental training in VR. It is a niche demo, but “use a mixed-reality pen to teach drilling technique” is a more respectable ambition than the usual lifestyle-filler content.
Razer Adds RGB to the One Thing Still Missing It
Razer’s Soma Chroma is an RGB gaming chair, which means the company looked at an object people already sit in for ten hours and decided the missing ingredient was reactive underglow tied to more than 300 games. The lumbar support may be nice. The premise still sounds like somebody lost a bet in a battlestation Discord.
Razer Reskins the Kitsune for Street Fighter Pilgrims
The other Razer launch is a Ryu-branded version of the Kitsune leverless fight stick timed for EVO 2026. It is tournament hardware for people who would absolutely pay extra to make their controller look like it has lore.
That leaves the June 28 digest inside its actual week, source-backed, and only mildly overrun by Logitech’s content machine.