This depends on a great number of factors... The type of electricity, (AC or DC?) the conductivity of the skin (wet skin makes a huge difference) and more. The wikipedia article, which i will link below says "death can reportedly occur from currents as low as 30 milliamperes."
It also has a handy little chart along with some useful tips on avoiding electric shocks.
It has 1000 watts
1,000 watts
Kill-A-Watt should be classified as an electrical gadget because it measures electricity consumption in terms of watts.
1000
Watts are not deadly but it would take 12 micro-watts through the heart to kill someone.
45220000 mega watts
a lot
10
A modem typically uses around 5-10 watts of electricity when in use.
A lamp post produces exactly zero watts, just like my computer produces zero watts. It is a user of electricity, not a producer. The amount of electricity used will depend on the bulb that is used in the lamp post.
Since the Coefficient of Performance (COP) is 2.5, for every 1 watt of electricity input, the heat pump produces 2.5 watts of heating or cooling output. Therefore, if 200 watts of electricity are used, the heat pump would produce 2.5 times 200, which equals 500 watts of equivalent heat output.
watts