I have now reached Nepal, one of the least developed and therefore most backward countries of the planet. They have a so called "Load Shedding Schedule"
implemented here, which is so unique in it's desperation, that I decided to publish it for a greater audience. It also conveys my difficulties in executing my moves in time for the next months to come. So I will hold back at taking up new games with a short thinking time!
"Load shedding" means, that the energy for electricity supply is just "elsewhere", wherever it may be, yet it is not here, where I am!
Nepal depends on water for electricity and as there are almost no rains in the winter, spring and summer, so the level behind the dams is depleting, forcing the government to implement the schedule. It's of course not all bad here: Nepal is famous for unspoilt natural beauty with pristine forests and medieval villages along the mountain chain of the Himalaya, including the highest peaks of the world (for example Mt. Everest). The economy is based on tourism for rafting, trekking and mountaineering, big industry is almost not present and the plough-and-plow-agriculture is just barely able to feed the growing population.
Just look at this schedule (times given are those, when there is NO electricity and therefore also NO Internet connection, which is anyways slow and erratic at best):
Sunday 6-9 am 1-7 pm
Monday 4-10 3-9
Tuesday 6-12 4-10
W. 9-1 6-12
T. 9-3 6-12
Friday 10-4 7-1
Saturday 3-9 12-6
Yep, this means an average of 10 hours of NO electricity per day!
Most public cyber-cafes, on which I am dependent, are opening from 9-10 am till about 10 evening. This means, that on a Thursday it's already a close shave for making my moves in time.
So, I don't know, where you live, yet this here is called: "Living In The Third World". 
P.S. I decided to add one of my lost games, because this is after all a site about chess! 
P.P.S. Just today I wandered at morning time through the town of Bairava here in Nepal in search of a working internet place. I have to catch a bus at noon and check out from my hotel, yet I also had to move in a game, where I can't take a vaccation, otherwise the game would be lost. At 10.30 I finally had a lucky success, found a cyber with generator and moved my piece!
The bus journey is long and I would not have reached the next town in time to make my move. Curse me for a fool be accepting a tournament, in which one can't take a break and where one has to move every day, and next fall for the idea to spend a vaccation in Nepal... 