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Next time hit the Escape key when you're done and no one will ever know!
Give me coffee to change the things I can and wine for those I can not!
PartsBin an Electronics Part Organizer - An updated version available! JaxCoder.com
Latest Article: Simon Says, A Child's Game
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If you really wanted to be evil, you could use PowerToys Keyboard Manager[^] to remap the keys without changing the physical keyboard.
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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Reminds me of a (sort of) mystery short story I read long ago, in the days of the mechanical typewriter, about a long-lasting conflict between one guy and this blind author. After the author has won one battle, the other guy takes revenge by sneaking into the author's house and a tool kit for switching the hammers of the author's typewriter around, so that the text written would become completely garbled. (That was the conclusion and main highlight of the story.)
It is difficult to believe that a writer of short stories (in those days) never had seen a mechanical typewriter. I was a boy when I read the story and I laughed out loud. Every hammer has its unique angle between the head and the arm; the arm length also varies. You couldn't even switch two neighboring arms without the arms crossing, getting stuck. The story is completely impossible, the main point is outright silly!
Some fiction authors make me upset when they in their writing include stuff of which they don't have a clue (but I do!). And then, some fiction authors do extremely thorough background studies to ensure that their story is logical and consistent with realities. Often, I do internet searches to check, learning e.g. that that specific Leica lens was indeed released more than 50 years ago, exactly the year that the main character was eagerly ordering it, learning a lot more about lenses along the way
I wrote to this author (Lars Mytting, "The sixteen trees of the Somme" - btw, I recommend the book to anyone loving wood!), asking him about the WW1 nerve gas that he writes about - I wasn't aware of any of that sort until WW2. He returned a quite lengthy reply, telling about what he had dug up of information about early chemical experiments, suggesting that the very first such nerve gas might have been used in WW1, although in very limited amount and probably not at all. In his novel, he took the freedom to use it in this one battle. It could have been the case (although there is no preserved evidence of it).
I was really impressed by the thoroughness of his background studies, and he expressed being pleased with readers attacking his books with that level of scrutiny 
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Reminds me of a similar story/brain-teaser where someone was murdered.
They managed to type a message with their last breath, but they placed their fingers on the wrong home keys.
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Mo problen om ny conputer.
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I did learn touch typing in 8th grade in school, years before the first PC keyboards. When keyboards arrived, I was thinking that I still remembered touch, sort of, as long as the room was lit. Typing in darkness increased the error rate by a few magnitudes.
To teach myself a lesson (of touch), I flipped off all the keytops and put them back on in random order and position. It took me a few weeks, especially to get the punctuation marks right. (Those were the ones I had most problems with in the dark, too.) Now, I can do touch 'for real'. The only problem is when I move to a different keyboard with punctuation (and æøå) in different positions.
Today, you can buy keyboards with all black keytops. If I didn't love my current keyboard as much as I do, I would have bought myself one of those.
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My current laptop is about 5 or 6 years old. The letters are just printed on the keytops, and the letters W, E, R, T, I, O, P, A, S, D, F, G, L, C, V and N are completely blank. The laptop is teaching me not to look at the keys, starting with the ones I use the most. It's the nicest thing it's ever done for me. K and M are the next to disappear.
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This is particularly cruel to your dyslexic co-workers. Now they will start typing correctly and will think they have been miraculously cured.
Advertise here – minimum three posts per day are guaranteed.
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The double point angst of her majesty confused youths. (9)
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Teenagers
angst
er - her majesty
ee - double point
confused - anag
In a closed society where everybody's guilty, the only crime is getting caught. In a world of thieves, the only final sin is stupidity. - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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Well, that was solved faster than I thought it would be. You're up tomorrow.
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Though far from being a youth, I am still a little confused by your clue. The solution given by pkfox makes perfect sense except for the bit about "her majesty" = "er". Could you perhaps enlighten me?
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ER = Her majesty, the late Queen Elizabeth the 2nd (21 April 1926 – 8 September 2022). ER stood/stands for Elizabeth Regina (Regina is Latin for Queen).
<edit>Add 'Her majesty' into the explanation as it was part of the query
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Thank you. I am no longer confused - still far from being a youth though. 
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The answer could be "QUEENBEE", as "her majesty" could refer to a queen, and "double point" could refer to the letter "B" (which looks like two points stacked on top of each other). "Angst" could be an anagram indicator for "youths", which when rearranged spell out "BEE".
So, "The double point angst of her majesty confused youths (9)" could be a cryptic clue for "QUEENBEE".
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Queen Bee is two words and 8 letters
How does B look like two points ?
How is angst an anagram indicator for youths ?
In a closed society where everybody's guilty, the only crime is getting caught. In a world of thieves, the only final sin is stupidity. - Hunter S Thompson - RIP
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Did you try and solve this clue with ChatGPT? That looks like the type of answer it would give.
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Tomorrow, from 11:00 until midnight (and it probably continues on Thursday, but prices for Thursday are not yet set), we are being paid for consuming electric power. Not much, though - around a quarter of a cent per kWh.
The total cost is not below zero: The power cable company charges for bringing the power to our homes; it is the power itself that has a price tag below zero.
This is the up and down sides of green power. Right now, Europe has got more solar power and wind than we need (and high mountain hydropower basins filled to the rim). When it is cloudy and no wind and the hydropower basins empty, a kWh may cost a dollar/Euro.
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Well, yes. But in Norway, the adoption of electric vehicles has been influenced by various factors, including government subsidies and the country's electricity prices. It's worth noting that Norway experienced record-high electricity prices in 2022, as highlighted in this article on SSB (Which is the Norwegian government's statistics bureau)
Rekordhøy strømpris i 2022 – dempet av strømstøtte[^]. Poor implementation of these subsidies gives some people money for using electric power, but this is not the general case nationwide.
To get a better understanding of the current electricity prices in Norway, you can refer to the Nord Pool website. They provide market data, including day-ahead area prices, which can offer insights into the fluctuating prices of electricity in different regions where the actual sales price on the market is given hour by hour: Market data | Nord Pool[^]
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The negative electricity prices I was referring to was those from the Nord Pool website, not at all affected by the state subsidies but the raw spot market prices. Spot market prices will be negative most of tomorrow as well.
I live in the central part of Norway, the 'Trøndelag' region. We have hardly received any electricity subsidies at all - almost all of that was routed to the the southern part of Norway. Subsidies are taken from our tax money, so it really is just a way to route your electricity bill through the state finances, hoping that is cheaper paying it through taxes than paying it directly. Well, it raises the taxes even for central and north Norway people, who receive next to no subsidies, so that we central/northerners will pay part of the power bill of the southerners.
When we complain about 'Record high electricity prices', it is like a well-known phrase-of-mouth, 'World famous in Norway'. We claim to have extremely costly electricity that will bring our industry to collapse unless the state puts in heavy subsidies, any time that there is a single region outside Norway with lower prices, ignoring that in lots of other European countries, the prices are maybe 2-3 times those 'record high' Norwegian prices.
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Ah, I see. The providers will pay you to use electricity. How does that happen?
At any rate, if you have a fixed price deal with your electricity provider you could have been paid to use electricity for quite some time:
Fastpriskunder tjener penger på å bruke strøm – NRK Rogaland – Lokale nyheter, TV og radio[^]. Another fun fact is that the government owns the largest power provider in Norway, so it can be viewed as just giving back a minor share of the profit and not as a tax. Even substracted for the deflated price, the power company made a huge profit.
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Kenneth Haugland wrote: f you have a fixed price deal with your electricity provider you could have been paid to use electricity for quite some time This is a crazy effect of the crazy way the subsidizing is implemented: You receive a refund that does not scale with the amount you pay for the power, but what you would have paid if you were on a spot price contract. With a fixed price contract, you were not at all affected by the rising power prices last fall, yet you received compensation for it. It is the craziest subsidizing scheme I have ever seen anywhere!
The majority of Norwegian domestic customers are on spot price contracts, and for many years, that has turned out to be the cheapest alternative. Last fall was the first time period ever when the extra price you pay for having a "predictable" power bill returns in a lower total cost. That is for the winter we have been through - and with a fixed price, you have no benefit of wind and sun bringing the price down below zero.
The power line company reads the power consumed by you every hour. This amount is multiplied by the Nord Pool spot price and summed up, so when the Nord Pool price is negative, the total sum is reduced. Your power provider usually adds a tiny, kWh-fee on top of the spot price.
On top of that sum comes the bill from the power line company, composed of a fixed cost per kWh, and a monthly fee set by your peak hourly consumption (the maximum of 3 hours on separate days).
So to actually reach a zero or negative power bill in total would require lots of days with very negative spot prices, so much that it covers up for both the power company's surcharge and the power line bill. That won't ever happen. There is only one below-zero factor in the calculation. It is the same factor that was at NOK 7-8/kWh (70-90 cents/kWh) last winter, and it does make a difference!
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