They produce a non-flickering warm glow that is way more relaxing than a bluer "daylight" bulb, at least for us. They are somewhere around $10 a bulb, but have significantly increased the cozy factor of our house. We run dimmers in all of our hangout areas, and bring the brightness way down.
The article argues that twilight is bluer than daylight, and therefore tells our bodies to get ready for sleep, however I would argue that warm diffused light tells my brain that it's after twilight, like cavemen around a fire at night.
Am I the only one here that doesn't have any problem with my home SONOS system? My family constantly plays music in most rooms of the house using a Spotify premium account. It's been a godsend, and it truly makes me feel like we are living in the future. All the sueing and inter-corporate politics is a little annoying to hear about, but I still listen to the speakers daily without giving it all much thought.
> they're always the same square shape and its always about fancy keyswitches, RGB, and little else.
This is where I disagree. I had severe hand and arm tendon pain for years, and finally dove into ergonomic mechanical keyboard options. It solved my issues, and I no longer feel the pain after typing all day.
I easily spend $350+ for a keyboard, and it's a very practical, life-changing decision, which involves a non-rectangular, non-RGB keyboard.
This article was a little goofy, apparently as a daily user of the EegoDox EZ, I'm a "coder who is actively working to bring about the singularity." ... Ok, cool.
Back to reality, though I couldn't recommend the ErgoDox EZ more. It's a quality piece of kit; built well, the graphical configurator is convenient, and the support is top notch. I had a keychatter issue early on, and they responded immediately with updated firmware that solved the issue. I've gone back to it as a daily driver multiple times over any other keyboard.
They produce a non-flickering warm glow that is way more relaxing than a bluer "daylight" bulb, at least for us. They are somewhere around $10 a bulb, but have significantly increased the cozy factor of our house. We run dimmers in all of our hangout areas, and bring the brightness way down.
The article argues that twilight is bluer than daylight, and therefore tells our bodies to get ready for sleep, however I would argue that warm diffused light tells my brain that it's after twilight, like cavemen around a fire at night.