Why does every small appliance or useful home electronics item have the BRIGHTEST LEDs in them?

I bought a new fan for our bedroom Sunday. It has 4 speed settings, and LEDs to display which setting you’re on.

Just like every other electrical device in our bedroom, I had to cover the LEDs with electrical tape because they are TOO DAMM BRIGHT. That one light was more than bright enough for me to see in the room with all the lights off.

I can’t sleep well if there’s a lot of light like that, especially blue light, and it’s like every fucking electronics manufacturer used the same extra bright blue LEDs.

All of our power strips have them. Same brightness.

The fans have them.

Don’t even get me started on digital clocks and the plague of bright LEDs that they bring about

Many charging plugs have them built into the plug itself.

Even some fucking light switches have them now!

I have about 6 different things in our bedroom that have electrical tape over their completely unnecessary LEDs.

Why has this become such a common thing? Is this really something most people want? To have a room that is never actually dark even with the lights turned off?

  • Brad Ganley@toad.work
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    1 year ago

    I get to be that guy! I’m so excited!

    In power strips, the lights are (in the overwhelming majority of cases) actually a neon bulb! They’re cheaper for that specific purpose because they can be powered directly off of the mains power with a single resistor.

    Your point is entirely valid and I bear the same cross, this is just a fun fact you can use to impress colleagues, strangers, and potential lovers, dazzling them with your deep esoteric knowledge of and passion for illuminators in power strips.

    • c2h6@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Hah, this is what I liked the most about reddit - learning random bits of knowledge about things I knew nothing about. I’m glad to see this happen here too!

    • Russianranger@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      The electrical tape approach is what I did and it did wonders. Went from having a myriad of green and blue LEDs on my fans/portable AC/etc to complete wonderful darkness when I retired for the night. Made a distinct difference in my ability to fall asleep faster at night. I hate having lights when going to bed. Darkness or bust.

  • Willer@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    fun fact: human eyes can actually perceive single photons.

    also fun fact: we can shoot single photons.

  • EntropicNinja@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    It’s so “Big Brother” can still watch you…?! 😅

    Bluetack is your friend. The constant red light on our baby monitor was too distracting in the pitch blackness of the night that it kept my kids awake. A small amount of Bluetack and this problem is solved. Not asthectically pleasing but a good option.

  • damnYouSun@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    I have a lamp and that has an LED that is on all the time.

    Why would a lamp have a permanently on LED? That’s what I get for getting cheap crap from China, rather than premium crap from China.

  • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    Why has this become such a common thing? Is this really something most people want? To have a room that is never actually dark even with the lights turned off?

    The gradual spread of light pollution has gotten crazy, and people still don’t really notice it. We’re at the point that it’s actually driving insects to extinction. If you look somewhere rural vs. urban the difference in what constitutes “night” is mindblowing, and rural areas are getting brighter all the time themselves.

    • Wahots@pawb.social
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      1 year ago

      I’m honestly a bit surprised that we don’t have mandatory dimmers installed in all major buildings that turn off the lights after X hour or x number of hours without any movement.

      That, and motion sensors and dimmers on street lights with shades on them to prevent light from being blasted into people’s homes and apartments.

      This much light pollution can’t be healthy.

      • Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        I usually just remove it and leave the space empty/open circuit.

        It’s very very rare that a missing/nonfunctional led will effect the rest of the device. In those rare cases, swap the light emitting diode for a regular diode (though a resistor would probably do fine too).

  • peopleproblems@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I used to work in electronics manufacturing. I won’t give my title because it was a shit title and didn’t describe what I did well at all. I think that was on purpose to keep our salaries low.

    I engineered final assembly test systems. Like the product fully completed. Most of these devices were commercial in nature.

    My man, the testers fucking LOVED LEDs. Because LEDs not turning on correctly always means the device fails.

    I hated them, because was really fucking hard to automate testing of LEDs. LEDs emit a wavelength, or combination of RGB. Because of the brilliance of my sales engineers, we used computer vision to automate this testing, NOT sensors. The reasoning? Much denser LED placements.

    But guess what happens when your supply chain and manufacutirng is entirely Chinese and your product is designed and prototyped and originally manufactured here? YOU GET THE WRONG FUCKING COLOR CALIBRATED. I’m not shitting you, it was a tiny difference in Red wavelength. Tiny. but computer vision doesn’t read wave length, it reads color.

    LEDs make testing easy for humans. If you just need to see them light up? Everything is great. Bonus points for brighter LEDs for faster moving tests. Faster moving tests = more profit. Human testers means you don’t spend money on automated testing and and can quickly repurpose humans to see if an LED is on.

    • Hexadecimalkink@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Did testers like blue LEDs more than red? Everything seems to be blue now but red are better for your eyes at night. Idgi.

      • expatriado@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I guess people here is not familiar with Technology Connections and Alec’s despise of blue LEDs.

        • rosatherad@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          A better comment would have been like “this reminds me of Technology Connections’ Alec Watson, he talks a lot about how much he hates blue LEDs. Here’s a video [link]”

          It makes the same reference, but provides more context, more content, and a new point of discussion.

          • expatriado@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            not everyone needs to be spoon fed, comments like the one i made start conversations, like it just did