Of course if you live with someone, you don’t switch on the lights at night ;)
Even when you do finally get it flush after several painful iterations of hanging it, gravity stretches the cord causing the base to come slightly away from the ceiling again.
If you’re OCD like me, it made the light a horrible reminder of that OCD. So in the end I gave up on the light.
Pity because it’s a really cool looking light.
What do you do if you want to move a ceiling light a bit to the side? Do you install an entire new electrical box?
You don’t actually need the box though. In fact they weren’t even available in my previous two homes. It’s really more a convenience thing than anything.
But again, this is assuming we are talking about the same thing (region differences and all).
When I bought the Ikea light, it was just hook and no way to fix the plastic surround to the ceiling.
Ikea might have updated the light since then though. As I said before, I got the light when it was new, long before it went viral, and ikea might have tweaked the design since.
I bought one of those ikea lamps, but never put it into service because it was a hardwired lamp, which made it a "project" installation.
Then one day at home depot, I noticed they sell an adapter from hanging lamp to track lighting rail. Wire the adapter, snap into tracklight over dining table.
It might be easier to use ikea ceiling lamps this way.
This project looks awesome and I will give it a shot, because it actually looks doable for a first ESP32 project. But I will first try it on the smaller version of the PS 2014 before I start working on my son's lamp.
- It's spherical
- The pattern of the tiles slightly resembles the pattern on the death star
- When you open it, it looks like it "explodes", like every proper death star eventually does
When I saw this story I didn't recognize the model number and I thought "Hey, is that the Rez lamp?" sure enough...
ffmpeg \
-pattern_type glob \
-framerate 30 \
-i "img/*.JPG" \
-i "star_wars_style_march.mp3" \
-s:v 1920x1080 \
-c:a libopus \
-c:v vp9 \
-shortest \
deathstar_timelapse.webm
I actually thought that VP9 and Opus are well supported everywhere by now, but maybe that is not the case…Regarding GitLab, as a general rule, I try to avoid products dominating the market, and I quite like their OSS policy…
Why wouldn't someone use gitlab