The answer is Yes, but you gotta pay for it! You can get “practical video lighting” - these are lights designed to replace standard bulbs but don’t have the flicker of normal lighting.
The answer is Yes, but you gotta pay for it! You can get “practical video lighting” - these are lights designed to replace standard bulbs but don’t have the flicker of normal lighting.
Yes, exactly this.
When compilers came along, some people honestly thought it would dumb down programming so much that anyone could do it.
When high level programming languages came along, they rejoiced again - now finally anyone can make software.
When Intellisense meat you no longer had to remember variable names, write your own imports and could guess how most libraries work, the bells rang out once again in celebration.
And now we have AI, it’s cool but really just another step like all those steps before. For me, it’s a replacement for the documentation I never read anyway. I can ask an AI a stupid question rather than bothering a human developer.
These days it’s my job to manage a small team of developers - when I ask them why they wrote a stupid thing that makes no sense, 90% of the time, the answer is that an AI wrote it for them.
You didn’t say why you wanted flicker free bulbs - if it’s because you make videos, welcome to the exciting world of cinematic lighting. All lights for videography are flicker free, but expect to pay accordingly.
Can I get some love for Stewart Lee?
Elon: Trump’s efficiency tzar
Videos about conspiracy nutters: Mind of Steele, M C Toon, Mohammed Shafiq
Mushrooms, you will have wild thoughts
deleted by creator