@Specmaster - "E threads" or ES base just means
Edison Screw base; measured in mm across the major diameter, and the standard applies worldwide, including the US. E17
used to be quite commonly used for exterior 120VAC C9 profile Christmas bulbs in the US, but
now no longer aside from appliances, ceiling fans and desk lamps, so the mega-stores rarely have any real selection thereof. E17 now are one of the few sizes that still lingers as incandescent for this reason; or at least, as of a year or so ago last time I shopped them.
The only ones you could consider a "European" standard are E14 and E27; but even these have been showing up in the US more and more over the last decade or two as the internet makes European "local designer" lighting products available to a global market. E14 is primarily a candelabra base like E12; E26/E27 have generally been homologated into one design by cheap Chinese manufacturing.
C - I totes agree about the insanity of fluorescent lighting "standards"... particularly CFLs went batshit cray-cray in the 70s-00s, as this chart shows.
EDIT: Yes, I know this was done to ensure that the ballast built into a lamp only got an appropriate fluorescent tube fitted, but still seriously
As for Legos... I quite enjoy the meditative nature of making big structures with shiny, smooth walls out of standard bricks, so the misery of their sharp corners underfoot is something I'll continue to consider part of
"the joy of the medium".
mnem
*toddles off to shop for some X-mas lights*