As a side note:
It also is worthwhile to reconsider how you install the lighting in your home, when using LED's. After all, LED light bulbs that fir in regular sockets are more of an compromise, to make the switch-over easy. But they are far from optimal when it comes to really useing the benefits of LED's.
Those bulbs (and by extension, high powered LED modules like the one i mentioned) are meant to produce a lot of a light in a single place, in the hope it spreads out into whatever you are going to illuminate. But there are rather easy to implemet options, if you are willing to depart from that philosophy.
Just as a quick example, if you have rudimentray skills to build your own stuff. Use L or U shaped profiles, thin ones. Mount them on your walls, a few cm below your ceiling. Then place flat LED strips in them, shining upwards to your ceiling. The profile is there so you never look directly into the bright LED's. That way you get a nice, indirect lighting in your room.
There is virtually no way to do that nicely with incadescent lamos, due to the heat. Even fluorescent tubes are limited here, because they are rather thick and need a bulky ballast to operate. With LED's you can make that virtually invisible. If you are into electronics (or get the proper constant-current supply) you can make it dimmable.
And heck, you don't even need to use white LED strips for that. Use RGB LED strips. They cost a bit more, but that way you can add some nice colour to your ambient lighting.
Really, i think that traditional lighting concepts are not really suitable for LED lighting. Not because they wouldn't work, they do, but because those traditional concepts are limited by the physics of regular bulbs (= heat, big size and high current consumption in low voltage applications). LED's allow _much_ more freedom in the way you arrange them.
My hope is that some day organic LED's will have a better lifetime expectancy and become cheaper. With that technology you can literally have your wallpaper _be_ the light source instead of just reflecting light from some other source. But i guess that will be quite a long way to come...
Greetings,
Chris