"I just did it. Not sure why it worked. It just did."
😄 — If it works, and the universe hasn’t collapsed, then it’s not broken... it's perfectly unstable! 🔧✨
So I said to my best friend: “Why don’t we make our own site?”
Not sure why. But what can go wrong? 😉
“I’m not sure what happens now. But this is what I made. And that’s enough for today.”
Acer Aspire A515-57G fully upgraded:
Original config: 16GB RAM + 500GB NVMe rated at ~4000 MB/s
Current config runs smoother, faster — and honestly feels like a different machine.
Midrange on paper. But not in action.
Acer Aspire 5 A515-57G.
They said 32GB was the max.
Acer said it. Specs said it. Forums echoed it.
But I wasn’t sure.
So I tried it anyway.
64GB installed — 2x32GB DDR4 sticks.
System boots. BIOS reads it. Task Manager grins: 64GB (2 of 2 slots used).
It worked. Not supposed to. Doesn’t matter.
Perfectly unstable. Just like everything else on this site.
— Not Sure, probably
📺 Watch the video
Heaven Benchmark: 2088 Score | 82.9 FPS
Acer Aspire A515-57G, they said it’s midrange. The specs said casual.
But this i5-1235U + RTX 2050 combo pushed out 82.9 FPS on Unigine Heaven at 1080p / High.
Posted this expecting 10 views… got 700 in a day. Then Reddit shadowbanned it.
Maybe it wasn’t supposed to work. That’s why it did.
DaVinci Resolve rendering. OBS recording. 5 browsers. 64GB RAM. Gen 4 NVMe at full tilt.
This wasn’t a benchmark. It was a live stress test — and this so-called “midrange” laptop didn’t flinch.
Not just numbers — actual pressure. The system stayed smooth the whole time.
That’s a win.
"Don’t be afraid. Keep trying."
This tool was built by someone who couldn’t see the keyboard, but didn’t stop trying. A raw, real way to learn typing — no gimmicks, no fluff.
Whether you’re just starting or trying to get back the feel, this tool might help.
Why does it work? Maybe because it’s personal. It wasn't built to teach typing the usual way. It was built to train feel, awareness, and trust in your own fingers — even when you can’t see the screen.
How it started:
It all really began when I partially lost my vision. I was stuck, unable to navigate a keyboard — I couldn’t see the keys or the screen unless I zoomed in to 700% (which I later figured out with help from a phone camera). That’s when I learned to switch on Magnifier… but I knew that wasn’t enough.
If I was going to live like this, I couldn’t be limited to one-finger typing while holding a phone. I couldn’t spend the rest of my time just clicking YouTube videos. You can only watch so much before it drives you crazy. I had to figure something out.
Luckily, I had some background in computers — not coding, just enough to find my way. But like many people, I’d always typed with two fingers, looking down. Now I had to learn a new way.
I borrowed a laptop, set up Narrator and Word (Notepad would’ve worked), and started from scratch. Just laying in bed, pressing random keys and listening. That was the beginning.
The key was learning habits: how to use spacebar, enter, delete — the real navigation tools. Letters, numbers, and punctuation would come later. I kept my hands in a comfy position and just… kept pressing. Yes, it was boring. But it was worth it.
You can invest a week into learning to type, or scroll TikTok forever. I chose to try. And yeah, I could barely write two words a minute at first. But it didn’t matter. I wasn’t in a race — I was rebuilding something.
Week by week, it got better. And that’s when the typing tool was born. A project to help me — and maybe help someone else too.
Share your weird, accidental win — or a time something worked when it absolutely shouldn’t have. We might feature it on the site!
Doesn’t work? I know. I tried it too.
So it depends how you define "work". 🤷♂️