My PC is located in a secure locked room. In Settings ==> Security I have chosen the following options:

(unchecked) Lock 1Password when computer locks

Lock after the system is idle for never

I use several browsers and I am constantly being asked to unlock 1P with my master password. This is a new behavior, I did not have to unlock 1P like this before. Has something changed?

This is !p for windows. I have re-booted my PC. I am thinking that would count as fully quitting 1P and the browsers. After the re-boot, I opened the 1P app and entered my master password. After opening the browsers, each browser is asking for the master password. I will check after several hours if I am still required to enter the master password in the browsers.


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I have a little bit different question related to the master password. I have three different accounts connected to my 1Password (two personal accounts and one account for teams). In 4 from 5 attempts when I enter the master password, the two personal accounts unlock automatically, but the account for teams keeps locked. Then I have to enter the password of the locked account to reach the stored items. This behaviour is new for 1Password 8 for Windows, the previous version and iOS mobile version works as expected, all connected accounts are unlocked by the master password automatically.

I am new to touch typing. I came across a copy of Typing Master pro v7 in an old hard drive and decided to give it a spin. I just finished lesson 1 and I like it. I am just wondering if the course is still good enough by modern standards and research on touch typing since it came out in 2007. Hell, even Typing Master itself has v11 out now.

My fascination with typewriters and typing goes back a ways. I took a course in typing when I was in my early teens -- but I didn't learn to touch type. My teacher, Mrs. Woodruff, didn't feel there was any point in forcing me not to look at my hands when I could type as fast as the fastest people in the class even withlooking (I was fast because my manual dexterity had been given a head start: six years of piano lessons).My parents bought a used typewriter when the local high school sold their old machines, and I loved using it. But it wasn't until the early 1970s, a few hours after I ate the huge mushroom Reuben gave me, that I started practicing touch typing. I was at the home of a friend of Marianne's, waiting for Marianne to show up; they had an electric typewriter, and I decided to play with it while I waited for her. The frantic typing practice session which ensued (and which produced the stream of consciousness piece "Exercises in Typing") was the best one I've ever had.The IBM Executive typewriter I found at a garage sale was magnificent, and (having been long since replaced by the Selectric), dirt cheap. Only somebody with a PhD in secretarial skills could operate it. It was a proportional spacing machine: an 'm' was five spaces wide, an 'i' was two. There were two separate space bars (two and three spaces respectively). To correct a mistake, you had to know the width of all the characters involved so that you could backspace the appropriate amount (backspace was the only single-space key on the machine). There was an arcane procedure for producing justified type which involved typing a page a first time (while using a special guide to measure where the lines ended), noting the extra spaces that needed to be added, marking the copy to show where two-width spaces would be replaced with three-width spaces (or, in the worst case, two 2-width spaces), and typing the page a second time. Even loading the ribbon (it was one of the first carbon ribbon machines on the market) was a major challenge: its rimless reels would spill their contents at the slightest mishandling, and the thin (less than 1/2" wide) tape had to be threaded through bewildering series of slots, grooves, carriers, and guides. It was a machine only a fanatic could love, and I did. I made regular trips to Santa Barbara's IBM parts center, and spent hours with tweezers, probes, hooks, needle-nosed pliers and other fine tools, getting it working right.But my best preparation for thinking about learning (and teaching) typing was learning to play the piano. Though I started fairly young, I didn't get even marginally serious about it until I was in my late teens. This meant that I did things more consciously (and, being older and less flexible, spent longer working out my problems), so I have a better idea of how I learned to play than if I'd been a wunderkind. Playing the piano is the hardest skill I've learned, and I think it's one of the harder physical skills tolearn: to read music expressively at sight requires dexterity, coordination, and analytical and interpretive skills. Compared to playing the piano, learning to type is a cinch; there is no problem in typing that learning to play the piano didn't over-prepare me to solve.When I first got involved with computers (in the early 1980s), I started thinking about typing from a different perspective, and wrote the first notes for what was eventually to resurface as Typing Master Class. In the first version, my concept of it was "Typing The Classics" -- the idea being that typing practice was boring, and would be more interesting if you had something good to practice with. So you'd type Moby Dick, the Bible, etc.A few years ago, I bought my brother a computer so I could exchange email with him. Since he was pretty much a beginning typist, I started looking around for some typing software that would help him learn the basics. That search turned up the well-known commercial packages (e.g. Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing 17), many lesser-known commercial offerings, and dozens of pieces of shareware and freeware software. Although many of these were perfectly adequate for helping my brother get started, I was dismayed that all software focused on the problems of beginners -- or dealt with the problems of advanced typists as if they were beginners. There was no typing software for experts.So, when I went through my files a few weeks ago looking for projects that I hadn't completed (to add to the "incompleted projects" section of my web site), I found Typing Master Class, made another pass through it, added it to my site, and sent out bulk email to makers of typing software.What do I want to do with Typing Master Class?I am a software designer (and programmer), so I know how programs are conceived, structured, and implemented. I am a pianist (though I don't do it professionally any more), so I know what's involved in a complex, high-level manual skill. I have been a teacher (that too was another life!), so I know what's involved in teaching and learning. And I'm also a good enough typist that the bottleneck is my brain (that is, thinking up things to type), not my fingers.Given these skills, I'm in a good position to think about how high-level typing software might work. However, other projects, especially music-related ones, are more important to me; I am not interested in building or marketing a piece of typing software. I figured that there was probably enough of a market for typing software that a high-end program along the lines I was imagining would be worth developing (especially for a company that already had a successful product for beginning typists), and I thought that if I put up the Typing Master Class page and sent out a few emails, somebody might read it, either be inspired to think about high-end typing software in a more comprehensive way (or at all!), or perhaps steal a few ideas for their existing product. However, if you're working on typing software and would like to talk about it, I'd enjoy corresponding with you.A related idea is to redesign the typewriter keyboard so that it's less awkward; the DVORAK keyboard is one attempt; here's another.

Touch Typist typing tutor is the earliest example of typing tutor software currently still on sale.[1] The software was written and released for sale in 1985 on the Sinclair QL computer.[2] Its first public sale was at The ZX Microfair in 1985. This was a very popular computer show held in The Horticultural Halls, Elverton Street, London, England. The ZX Microfair was a showcase for all manner of software and hardware related to the Sinclair range of computers. The software was also first advertised as a small classified advert in QL World magazine, but soon became a flagship product for the company formed to sell it, Sector Software.

The award-winning online typing competition, TypeRacer, is the best free typing game in the world. It is the first-ever multiplayer typing game, which lets you race against real people typing quotes from books, movies, and songs.

Your typing speed will improve by at least 10 WPM if you play this free game at least once a week. TypeRacer is much more fun than just a free typing test. It's better to practice typing on typeracer.com than any free typing program or typing tutor. The consensus is clear: among computer typing games, TypeRacer is king!

Don't wait to get started: the road to becoming a touch typing master is long, but at least TypeRacer makes it fun and easy. To be clear, TypeRacer is not an easy typing game, but it will actually make you a better typist than those easy typing games for kids. It makes you type the same sort of text you would see at typing jobs.

Don't know how to type yet? Then learn to type! Just grab a free typing tutor or read a free typing tutorial. There are many free typing lessons on the web. You can also just download Mavis Beacon if you prefer.

Already know how to type? Then just have fun! TypeRacer is one of the best free online games, so why play any other addicting games which don't improve your typing speed in the process? You can quit those other computer games, flash games, facebook games, and kids games, and get focused on TypeRacer: the game that is actually good for you! ff782bc1db

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