Two tools I actually use every day — and why I recommend them

A quick honest review of the DJI Osmo Pocket 4 and the Logitech G903 LIGHTSPEED, two pieces of gear that genuinely improved how I work and create.

Jhonatan Matias
By Jhonatan Matias
Founder of DITAP · Tech Infrastructure & OperationsJune 10, 20265 min read
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This article contains affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases — at no extra cost to you.

I don't do a lot of product recommendations. When I do, it's because something actually changed the way I work — not because someone sent me a free sample. These two products did exactly that.


DJI Osmo Pocket 4 — The best compact camera I've ever used

I travel constantly. Between client meetings in different countries and documenting the work I do building systems and companies, I need a camera that's small enough to always carry but good enough that I actually use the footage.

The DJI Osmo Pocket 4 is that camera.

The 3-axis mechanical stabilization is genuinely impressive — you can walk, run, or shoot from a moving vehicle and the footage looks smooth. The sensor upgrade over previous versions is noticeable in low light, which matters because most interesting things happen in bars, offices, and conferences, not in sunlit studios.

What I use it for: quick behind-the-scenes content, travel clips, short-form video for social media, and documenting processes when I'm building out infrastructure for clients.

If you create content at all — even casually — this is the compact camera I'd point you to without hesitation.


Logitech G903 LIGHTSPEED — A mouse that gets out of your way

I spend most of my day in front of a screen. Code, documents, strategy decks, spreadsheets, dashboards — it all goes through a mouse. After years of switching between different peripherals, the Logitech G903 LIGHTSPEED is the one I keep coming back to.

The LIGHTSPEED wireless tech is the key differentiator. There's genuinely zero perceptible lag compared to wired. I stopped thinking about whether my mouse was wireless the day I switched to it — which is exactly what you want from a peripheral.

The HERO sensor is precise without being twitchy. The ambidextrous design is comfortable for extended sessions. And the scroll wheel that switches between ratchet and free-spin modes is one of those small things that you don't think about until you've used it — then you can't go back.

If you're a knowledge worker or creator who lives in front of a screen, a good mouse is one of the highest-ROI investments you can make on your desk setup.


Both of these are things I'd buy again if they broke tomorrow. That's the only test I use.

Note: the links above are affiliate links. If you buy through them, I get a small commission at no extra cost to you. I only link to things I actually own and use.

Products mentioned

DJI Osmo Pocket 4

DJI Osmo Pocket 4

Best for: creators who need a pocketable camera that's actually good enough to use

  • Pocket-sized — fits in any jacket or jeans pocket
  • Stabilization that actually works in real-world conditions
  • Fast startup — ready to record in under 2 seconds
  • Pairs easily with a phone for monitoring and export
  • Battery life is decent but not outstanding for hours of shooting
  • The magnetic accessories system takes some getting used to
Check price on Amazon
Logitech G903 LIGHTSPEED

Logitech G903 LIGHTSPEED

Best for: knowledge workers and creators who live in front of a screen all day

  • LIGHTSPEED wireless — indistinguishable from wired in daily use
  • Comfortable for long sessions (I often work 8–10 hours straight)
  • The dual-mode scroll wheel is genuinely useful
  • POWERPLAY compatible for wireless charging while you use it
  • On the heavier side compared to some newer ultra-light mice
  • G HUB software is bloated — set it once and never open it again
Check price on Amazon
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Jhonatan Matias
About the author

Jhonatan Matias

Founder of DITAP. 18 years building and operating technology infrastructure and companies across Argentina, Chile, and Italy. I write about systems, operations, and the tools I actually use.

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