Exactly what I'm saying
As far as incandescents go, I won't touch it if it isn't a high-wattage halogen, just because the yellow light isn't bright enough for me to see jack without being so bright I'm blind....
Sunlight is between 5500K and 6500K on a regular day even as high as 8000 or 10000K if its cloudy.
White LEDs are usually in the 6000K range on color output, so (other than the flicker) I think it would just take a little getting used to and then you wouldn't notice it at all anymore.
I think that we are used to the yellow tint of lights just because thats what we have grown up with, but in nature that light exists only at sunrise/sunset and if something is on fire.
Just my $.02
I would agree that starting on your own is probably the best idea.
I work part-time but I am a student working for a small company so it works out well for both of us.
I get paid well for someone still in school, and my company gets their stuff kept in working condition for way less than they would pay if they hired someone with a degree.
They'll have to dump a cool billion in order to upgrade.
Maybe Obama can bail out the AT&T network too! I mean, I don't really NEED that money anyway, so it might as well fix a network I don't use...
Exactly what I'm saying As far as incandescents go, I won't touch it if it isn't a high-wattage halogen, just because the yellow light isn't bright enough for me to see jack without being so bright I'm blind....
Sunlight is between 5500K and 6500K on a regular day even as high as 8000 or 10000K if its cloudy. White LEDs are usually in the 6000K range on color output, so (other than the flicker) I think it would just take a little getting used to and then you wouldn't notice it at all anymore. I think that we are used to the yellow tint of lights just because thats what we have grown up with, but in nature that light exists only at sunrise/sunset and if something is on fire. Just my $.02
I would agree that starting on your own is probably the best idea. I work part-time but I am a student working for a small company so it works out well for both of us. I get paid well for someone still in school, and my company gets their stuff kept in working condition for way less than they would pay if they hired someone with a degree.