Personally, before low-energy (fluorescent 'incandescent-like' direct replacements) bulbs blew far more frequently than 1000hr/each. Though I'd had the supply checked, with nothing wrong found, I'd get circuit-tripping failures (whichever floor's circuit was involved at the time) whenever I turned on a light and had a blown bulb. Replacing different wattages did not make much obvious difference. Computer equipment on the (seperate but equivalent) ring-main has never suffered from spikes/failures, except for occasional general (or, sometimes, single-phase and thus one house in three) neighbourhood outages that don't trip anything at home.
Then I started replacing with the 'low energy' replacements, the early generation that were slow to start. I still have mostly those. I've had maybe three fail for 'lifetime' reasons since then (none have needed the RCD resetting on the given fusebox circuit, when they did) and I had to replace some when I had an upstairs water leak that seeped down (there was water sloshing inside. the 'bulb' diffuser - while no power was there of course! - and I decided to still not use them, even once they'd been dried out), the latter happened once LED 'direct incandescent replacements' had arrived on the market, the former not quite (or not yet looking worth the bleeding-edge premium of the time?).
Shuffled around, to get LEDs where they'd be better than the early generation ones, I've not had any further failures. Years. Maybe >decade? In this one room, that's ~15x1000h of accumulated use for every hour of average use per day. Let's say it's 3hr/evening, I'd expect at least one failure from a weak (and likely >10yo) 'new' bulb, from chance, looking at current (not contemporary) estimates of lifetimes, though the current sole LED in the room might drag it out much longer.
What thread is this again?