We're using the highest tier Postgres instance at my work for one of our legacy Heroku apps and it costs thousands over what we'd pay for the equivalent on AWS directly.
I've got the color/RGB Philips Hue bulbs indoors and I find you can change them to a nice warm yellow color which is nice but they also can be changed to act like a candle.
These are Christmas light specific - but Tru-Tone makes LED bulbs that look like filament bulbs: https://www.tru-tone.com/. I've just ordered some so I'll update this comment once I've had a look.
This was great, thanks for sharing. I really do love the "warmth" provided by VHS, but I often wonder if that is just nostalgia from using a technology we grew up with?
I've been getting into old technology the past few years and a Panasonic AG-170 VHS Reporter camera was one item I had picked up. I've recorded a few social gatherings and trips with friends so far and plan to edit them into a 80s/90s styled montage. However, my camera recently stopped recording any video or audio with the viewfinder showing a black/blank image, which is a real bummer. I imagine there is an electronic component inside that may have failed.
Does anyone know of any forums where VHS enthusiasts gather? I'd love to dig around to see if I can find any resources for diagnosing and repairing this camera on my own. Unfortunately VHS repair shops are quite rare, if not nearly extinct in 2023.
The Steam deck already runs Arch and you can use the thing as a desktop computer, so that OS pretty much is just Linux. Valve has invested a lot to make the ecosystem better and I've little doubt they'll continue to do just that.
Are you Canadian? I had previously looked into heat pumps for cold climates and thought that it was economically not a great investment and required a gas back-up.
No, Massachusetts, so probably warmer than you, depending on where you are.
Even in Canada, though, I'd look into whether heat pumps with resistive auxillary heat are economical. If it only ever goes below -20⁰F for, say, a week a year, you'd probably still come out on top. And you'd definitely come out on top environmentally if your electricity is mostly green.
And with heat strips, a heat pump unit can continue to provide heating even below -20. Heat strips do make the heat pump more expensive, but I would wager they're less expensive than having a separate furnace.
Have a look what's being used in the Nordics in Europe. Sweden has 90% share of heat pumps for residential heating systems for example. I've got a Panasonic that heats to -35°C as advertised by the manufacturer and-40°C as tested in the lab.