Haha that lamp looks awesomly alien and your desk looks similiar to mine

. I have stereo speakers hooked up to the PC as well, they are even bigger than the monitor (sound's very important

).
If you are intrestred: I have built recently a switched power-LED supply which can even be dimmed via PWM. Here are some pictures:
Those are four 1W warm white pLED's hooked up to a cooling body 20 times as big. The whole circutry draws about 4,5 Watts so roundabout 89% efficiency.
Those 1W pLEDs have 95 Lumen of Lightpower, they are pretty bright already (look a bit darker on the picture). If you want more you can hook up 3W or 4W pLEDs as well. [the 1W hurt the eye tho already so be careful

]
You can connect up to 8 LEDs in red (rot) or 5 LEDs of any other color (nicht rot). The table shows what voltage you need then, since its voltage-regulated.
Power supply would be via a bridge rectifier or similiar and an AC trafo. You could use any direct current supply tho as well.
If you use a transformator like I did, you can connect 4 LEDs and the Trafo needs to have 15 Volts. The 1W LEDs need about 350 mA and the trafo I used gives 331 mA which is enough for all four. 4 LEDs have 3,5V which is multiplied with 4 = 14 V (with 5 LEDs you'ld need 17,5 Volts so all 5 LEDs would be a bit darker than with 4). If you take 3W or 4W LED's you just need to adjust the trafo to a model that gives 750mA (3W pLED) or 1000mA (4W pLED) respectively @15V.
You need to watch that the trafo doesnt give more than 15 V, cause its no-load voltage would be 19,2 V then, which rectified is about 23 V and that would be the maximum rating of the TS19377.
If you dont use a PWM or TTL signal to dim the LEDs, you can use a 0 Ohms resistor for R6 to connect Pin 2 to Vcc and leave C4 out.
R2,R3,R4 and R5 would be:
1W pLED @350mA = 1,2 Ohms and 1,8 Ohms parallel (2 resitors)
3W pLED @750 mA = 1 Ohms and 3 x 1,5 Ohms parallel (4 resistors)
4W pLED @1000 mA = 4 x 1 Ohms (4 resitors)
R1 would be:
1W pLED @350mA = 220 Ohms
3W and 4W pLED = 470 Ohms
Most important thing: connect the
LEDs in series, never parallel. If you connect them parallel, only the 1st LED in line will light at all but break after a short time.
If you want more info ask away. Here's the board layout:
http://www.elektor.de/credit-payment.589.lynkx?event=Zur%20Kasse&productGuid=bb7368b7-89e7-43b4-b3ac-2f7480c9e15f
A bit nasty to solder that SMDs tho :/