Go ahead. Type comfortably and without anxiety. Take the fast route. It's INTERNATIONAL CAPS LOCK DAY! No one will know if you're screaming, celebrating, or if you always type in all caps.
We know this day twice a year, on October 22nd and June 28th, it seems that the world needs to use the caps lock so much that we forget to use the caps lock so much.
International Caps Lock Day ridicules the cap lock's typographical style. "The overwhelming majority of the world's population writes in scripts that have no concept of letter casing," the founder of the October 22nd date, Derek Arnold, a software developer from Iowa, was quoted as saying.
That may be true, but the bulk of the scripts in the world have letter casing. And the laws governing them change depending on the language and the script. If a language uses Greek, Latin, Arminian, Coptic, Coptic, or some others, a bicameral script makes the typographical term. As a way to identify works written in katakana, Eastern languages change between forms and have developed uppercase letters.
Caps Lock Day is a day that brings fun to our day and perhaps gets away with a few shouted texts and tweets, as well as the creation of written code for languages.
Use your Caps Lock key, but not with abandon. Although the day's rules may have been thrown out the proverbial window, the day is not named All Caps All Day Day. Enjoy the memes and post #CapsLockDay on social media.
History
On October 22, 2000, Derek Arnold founded International Caps Lock Day as a parody on "the small-mindedness of certain Western individuals." Billy Mays died on June 28, 2009, the day he died on June 28, 2009. His caps lock enthusiasm was broadcast through infomercials, making him internationally famous.