(Our happy hour fact to amaze your drinking buddies with.)

According to a new study, office e-mails contain more lies than traditional written communication.

Researchers gave MBA students $89 to divide between themselves and a fictional party who only knew the dollar amount was between $5 and $100. When using e-mail to correspond with the fictional party, the MBA students lied about the size of the pot 92 percent of the time, but did so only 64 percent of the time when communicating by handwritten letter.

"There is a growing concern in the workplace over e-mail communications, and it comes down to trust," said the study's co-author. "You're not afforded the luxury of seeing nonverbal and behavioral cues over e-mail."

We've also noticed this phenomenon, but more frequently in our personal inbox. We get all sorts of messages from women -- sexy women -- who want to meet us and turn us into better lovers. It turns out they are lies, every single damn one of them.

If you're going to spread lies, lies and more lies, why not click "Send" on the sexiest keyboard money can buy? Put in a request for one of these wicked keyboards:

Keyboards for the Typing Connoisseur