6:46 desk shelf hack using pavers is clever, it's also add industrial vibe. I think I will try that to replace mine, which is using old cassette as base (not safety lol).
The Kelvin scale for light temperature is derived from this : Any mass emits light depending on temperature, we just cant see it. We humans emit in infrared at 37°C, but if you heat a metal piece it'll start to glow red then whiter and whiter The light emitted shifts from infrared to uv while the temperature increases (our Sun emits bc its hella hot just like a very hot iron bar) That's why a blue flame is hotter than an red one, and a blue star is hotter than a red one A 6700K would be the color emitted by a mass at 6700 Kelvin (arround 6400°C - 11 600 °F)
People only ask why tgr jane is so expensive when talking about aftermarket price. People were buying them for $7k+ at some points. Otherwise, jane v1 was $420, $550 for jane v2 raffle price. Compared to $160-225 of the qk80. IMO it's more to do with jane being a small limited run using google forms to buy it and all logistics being done by a couple people, compared to qk's unlimited run done with logistics done by several large established vendors and their teams, which is only possible these days because of how large the hobby has become. If you order a keyboard to be made by a manufacturer and want 50 done, it'll cost you $200 each. If you want 2000 done it'll cost you $30 each, for the exact same product.
light intensity is based in temperature, so "higher the temperature, brighter the steel", thats why 7000k is more "white" than 3000k, for example. Just bringing this fact to help with the content, wich is very good
do you mean those keyboards that resemble typewriters, or actual typewriters? i don't have experience with either tbh but i'm sure you can find plenty of sound tests on youtube!
@@AvinashKunjamboo the ones that resemble typewriters. Sorry, English isn't my mother tong. I've a feeling they won't be comfortable to typing for hours, but never really tried.
2:39 Kelvin is the unit of temperature used in physics. the temperature of a light bulb mimics the color a given object glows when it gets that hot (e.g. an iron rod heated to 5000 K = 8540 F = 4726 C glows bright white). there's a disconnect there because in design a "cool light" is more blue, but from a physics perspective blue light is very hot. check out en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black-body_radiation if you wanna learn more.
Lord Kelvin is one of the most important mathematical physicists in history. The Kelvin scale for lighting temperature is i think derived from the light you get from heating something up to that many degrees Kelvin. ( a measure of temperature like celsius or Fahrenheit) ❤
In case somebody cares about the kelvin scale, it works this way: - Kelvin is am easure of temperature (usually); - Colors near the red have less energy while colors near the violet have more; - temperature = energy, so the higher the temperature (kelvin) the closer to violet the colour is; The reason we call them warm and cold lights is because we associate them with regions that are colder or warmer even tho "cold lights" have more energy there fore more temperature. I think I explained it fairly well.
Love your channel, just discovered it. But can you do stuff other than keyboards? I know you probably earn a lot from it, but you've got the capability to branch out further. Do more design stuff! Do more tech stuff!
Hello! I fully intend on making vids further away from keyboards. I think I felt trapped in the niche before but now having taken a step back for over a year, very keen to make videos on other things too. This comment has helped the confidence in that so much so thank you man!
@@AvinashKunjambooHey Avi, just came across your channel for the first time while watching your video on lighting - instantly a fan! Personally would love to see more stuff related to design and aesthetics, but regardless of what direction you are headed in I'm excited to see what's next!
Thank you! I can't seem to find it on the IKEA Australia website but it was a cheapo one from there haha. There are a few options that are clip-on etc!
The word for what you're calling "harsh" is "specular" - the opposite of diffuse. Like sunshine on a clear day: crisp, defined shadows. #PleaseLetMeUseWhatILearnedInFilmSchool
This is such great advice on how to light a space. Quick video and engaging, and I liked the inclusion of the IKEA lights and how to set them up. Thanks!
2:47 The temperature here refers to the colour of a 'blackbody' at this temperature. A blackbody is a perfect object that reflects no light (i.e. is perfectly black) so only emits light due to heat radiating from it. The colour of the light emitted depends only on the temperature of the object. Think of a piece of hot metal in a blacksmith's that glows red hot. The hotter it is, the more blue it looks, think of the hot white sparks from welding. The same is true for stars, the hotter ones look more blue (e.g. red giants are called that because they are fairly cool at the surface and so appear red, and the opposite for white dwarfs). So that's why the bluer lighting corresponds to a higher temperature. Sunlight is about 5000K, because surprise surprise the actual 'surface' temperature of the Sun is about that.
Thanks! At the moment, I use the LaCie Rugged hard drives or Samsung T series SSDs if I need to move things around, but in my PC I've just been adding more internal hard drives haha