Also, you can remove the wifi chips, which I have.
Discussion
i dunno why red is shunned, it's the most efficient for the lumens and 620nm was the original LED... i have a pair of USB 5v powered led strips as my primary lightning in my downstairs area
green, ok, green is ok, it's just very fucking bright, but blue, hasn't anyone received the memo about how the most common pure blue emitter is exactly a frequency that has been found to disrupt circadian rhythms?
and most "white" LEDs and amber types tend to also be actually UV with phosphors and these are nasty as well... there is two types of LED i approve of - the pure frequency red and green, and quantum dot OLEDs, which have an almost perfect flat spectral curve
otherwise, give me neon orange old school illuminators or incandescent tungsten with or without the halides
especially if the device is AC powered, old school orange neon is the classic standard of indicator lamp, there is no actual reason why to not use them
whoever these cunts are that think we want blue LED indicators in devices that we might want to sleep next to, needs to be slapped upside the head
A slap upside the head would work wonders. Words don’t work with these animals.
Every f*n appliance, too.
nostr:npub14am887cf6kvwkce89nt7dsw3v9qrrn0uppxyvr6a2jd7xdwuwccqwnudp2 the method you used to red-out your fridge LED, can that easily be applied to other appliances?
the pure blue LEDs basically all you can do is dim them, i just put a little tiny piece of black insulation tape over them, and that's ok, but it's super annoying when they combine them with capacitative touch sensors, where you can't really do that... well, you can, fun fact about capacitative sensors is you can put tape over them and they still sense touch
i live out in the boonies now and the air here is really good except when we get a dust storm blow out over the atlantic from mauritania and morocco, which can be hellishly bad, in fact, last time it happened i had serious breathing problems
but aside from that, i really just need to open my windows, the nearest heavy industry to me is on the opposite side of a mountain range that reaches over 5000 feet at the highest ...
but i still want a goddamn ionizer... this place i live in has raw resin composite wood panels everywhere, and i know it's filling the air with VOCs and an ioniser helps that stuff get clear, though carbon filtering is even better
the HEPA filters are annoying though, really, once they get ladened with too much crud they smell bad and are just shitty trash you have to throw out and the price of the replacements is pretty steep in a lot of cases
one thing i will say is that you should avoid the ones that have cylindrical filter units, those are so space-inefficient the price and the shipping cost of them... simple flat panels under an inch thick work way better and are cheaper and cheaper to transport