For stairway timed lighting in my condo I've been obliged to install halogens (the ones with an halogen bulb inside a larger standard incandescent bulb).
I needed immediate turn-on even in cold climates (stairs are not heated), and CFL were unsuitable. (Obvious here incandescent are illegal).
Their lifespan was horrible: less than 6 months (incandescent lasted two or more years).
In my apartment I had to switch to CFLs, and I don't like them: their lifespan is casual: I remember when the first ones on the market were specified for X hours of life, and I usually got a 10th of this. Now they are specified for N switch-on, and sometimes I get a 10t of this...
I used to open the socket to investigate the failure: it was always some cheap electronic component...
I think that the electronics should be separated from the bulb: to illuminate the car park of the condo we have external fixtures by Philips, that use a replaceable fluorescent bulb driven by a circuit inside the fixture. One 18 W and two 9 W. I installed them more than 20 years ago, and they are still there (but now I cannot find them in Philips on-line catalog). Bulbs were replaced 2 or 3 times (I mean they lasted more than 6 years, about 10 hours (environ) on every single day).
On the side of the building there are other two fixture using standard CFL. Lamps last not more than 2 years, some less than one. They are powered in parallel with the others...
By having the electronics inside the fixture the cost of the bulb may be reduced, and a better engineered and performing electronics may be used (obviously the initial cost may be higher, but this is a one-off expense)