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Cartoon Caption Winner: Rough Patch?
And the winner of The Edge s April cartoon caption contest is .
. Rob Fulford, IT Workstation Tech II at Idaho Power Co., for his caption:
And in second place: Chad Fraleigh, a retired computer programmer for the Department of Defense, for the caption: So they say you re the guy to go to about installling patches.
Thanks to everyone for their contributions. A new contest will be posted next week.
John Klossner has been drawing technology cartoons for more than 15 years. His work regularly appears in Computerworld and Federal Computer Week. His illustrations and cartoons have also been published in The New Yorker, Barron s, and The Wall Street Journal.
Kramer v. Comm’r, T.C. Memo. 2021-16 | February 16, 2021 | Gale, J. | Dkt. Nos. 15224-17 & 15368-17
Short Summary: The IRS issued two notices of deficiency to Don Kramer and Lela Arabuli (petitoners). The first notice of deficiency asserted deficiencies for petitioners’ 2006-2010 tax years and various penalties fraud penalties were asserted solely against Don Kramer for 2006-2008. The second notice of deficiency determined related solely to Don Kramer and asserted, among other things, fraud penalties for his 2004-2005 tax years. Petitoners timely filed a petition with the United States Tax Court to challenge the IRS’ determinations. However, petitioners failed to respond to the IRS’ discovery requests, including request for admissions. In reply to the IRS’ discovery requests, don Kramer filed a document entitled “Tax Statement Affidavit,” which set forth hundreds of pages of tax-protestor rhetoric. Lela Arabuli did not respond at all. Accordingly, after motion by the I
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GRESHAM, OR The monumental power failure in Texas caused by unseasonable cold showed how extreme weather can push an electric grid to the brink.
The average U.S. power customer loses electricity for 1.5 to 2 hours annually even before extreme weather events are taken into account, according to data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration. As the Texas experience showed, hurricanes, snowstorms, heat waves and other extreme weather events can make such outages dramatically worse.
Customers in Oregon state experienced 4.41 hours without power in 2019 0.29 fewer hours than the national average of 4.7 hours in 2019, which is the most recent information available, according to the EIA.
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(Shutterstock)
WILSONVILLE, OR The monumental power failure in Texas caused by unseasonable cold showed how extreme weather can push an electric grid to the brink.
The average U.S. power customer loses electricity for 1.5 to 2 hours annually even before extreme weather events are taken into account, according to data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration. As the Texas experience showed, hurricanes, snowstorms, heat waves and other extreme weather events can make such outages dramatically worse.
Customers in Oregon state experienced 4.41 hours without power in 2019 0.29 fewer hours than the national average of 4.7 hours in 2019, which is the most recent information available, according to the EIA.