As somebody with both, there are pros and cons to each.
The pros of the pre-installed LED light fixtures is that you wire them in and they work. The cons are, all LEDs fail eventually, and when the ones that have the pre-installed LEDs fail, you have to replace the whole thing unless you are incredibly DIY competent.
A second con of the fixtures with pre-installed LEDs is that some of them, especially the cheaper ones, have issues with buzz. When they are turned on you can frequently hear the transformer humming and to some people that is an annoyance. I am one of those people and I have had to re-replace two entire fixtures because of this.
The pros of the replaceable bulb versions are that since all LED bulbs fail eventually, it is much easier to replace their LEDs. The cons are sometimes the appearance of them aren't as interesting or fun as the ones with the pre-installed LEDs.
They also have issues with flicker, but that is more dependent upon the bulbs. It has become rather difficult to find a good quality replaceable e27 base bulb that does not flicker or buzz long before the bulb actually fails.
However, since you can replace the bulbs it is easier to make sure that the Kelvin rating of the bulbs matches the rest of the bulbs in the room, and for home use I typically recommend 2700k or 3000k.
Finally, in my personal opinion you should not get any light fixture that uses candelabra bulbs as they seem to have a higher failure rate than the e27s.
Price wise, the pre-installed LEDs can often be cheaper than the ones with the external LED bulbs when you factor in the cost of the LED bulbs.
They both typically have the same ease of installation, which is on par with if you can operate a screwdriver you can install them.
Ultimately it comes down to your competence and self confidence.
One semi-accidental food discovery I made is when you are sauteing onions and mushrooms, put a dash of soy (or even better liquid aminos) and then when they are almost done throw about a shot of red wine in and simmer it out. The combo brings out so much flavor that it's almost overpoweringly good!
No prom no dances but I did graduate and attend my graduation.
I was the only one that graduated that year because I went to a small school and I worked ahead and so technically I was valedictorian and also technically every party I go to is a reunion party for my graduating class.
Upvoted! I learned how pretty young, but I have a few friends who never did and they have told me that the main thing holding them back as adults is the fear of falling down. Is it the same for you?
I didn't want to put out a brusque reply, partly to not offend anyone and partly so I don't get hoisted by my own petard in the future.
I dreamed when I was young that I had a machine that could alter the very fabric of reality. Turn dirt into gold, turn trash into treasure, change a person's body to be young and strong and perfect in every way.
I dreamed about how I could have the perfect male body, tall, fit, perfect in every way with such a machine, and then the thought crossed my mind that even if I was physically perfect in every way it wouldn't mean that a woman would want to automatically be with me because of who I am as a person.
That self-inflicted gunshot wound to the skull of my self-esteem dealt a heavy blow to my burgeoning manhood, and I don't know if I have really gotten over it despite having slept with many women and even married one of them.
That being said, I don't believe I have an egg to crack. I hate myself, yes, but so much so that even if I were different, either a perfect man or a perfect woman, it wouldn't fix what's wrong with me.
Being a woman won't make me stop hating myself, it would only give me new things to hate about myself and new yardsticks that I can't measure up to.
And aside from that, men are not attractive to me at all. Like, maybe hormones would affect that and change my mind but other stuff probably has to happen first before I even consider crossing that bridge.
All of that being said, I deeply respect the other people who are going through that. I can only barely imagine what it's like for them.
I've noticed that when I am specking out a new computer I typically fall into the trap of wanting the absolute best computer I can get for the money.
I've always been on the cheaper side, so I have found myself spending days or weeks researching various parts at various quality levels at various prices.
It becomes a huge drag.
Set the budget that you're comfortable with, find the motherboard that has the features that you want, then get a CPU that fits in that price range, a case that fits your use cases, and then if you're going to splurge on anything splurge on the power supply as a good power supply can last you through multiple computers.
If you have to save money somewhere, save money on RAM as you can always order more or upgrade the rim that you have relatively inexpensively. Maybe if you're going intel, purchase an i5 CPU and then consider upgrading if you max out its abilities or you find yourself frequently running at 100% utilization.
And don't overlook pre-builts. There are lots of refurbished computers that you can purchase for far less than the cost of the individual parts that have all of the minimum specs that you want in exchange for little things like only having a single stick of ram or having a low quality SSD.
There's nothing that stops you from upgrading later should your use case change.
That being said, I have had very good luck with the Feit electric dimmers from Costco.
I have five or six of them installed in my house and I have no complaints about their functionality after over a year of continual use.