After I upgraded my computer and reinstalled Eos Utility to use with my Canon EOS 7D (mark I), Eos Utility now *always* shoots twice when I take photos from the computer (remote shooting). Any idea why this is so? I have disabled raw and both photos are stored on the PC in their Jpeg format. I do hundred of shoots from a photostand, and it is annoying both to wait for double shoots, but also to remove every second image from the computer afterwards. Hopefully someone has experience the same and can provide a solution.

I am working with the electric asset package, and testing different configuration settings. A big issue I am finding is the disable topology GP tool is hit and miss. Although it always succeeds in the output message, it doesnt always actual work.


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In the documentation,it requires: "The connected ArcGIS Enterprise portal account must be the utility network owner."

Also make sure the utility network from the map service as the input for the Disable the Utility Network tool, not from the direct database connection

I noticed often whenever I have 2 or more charges of my utility skill, set to shift, it ends up being used twice almost regardless. only way i can use a single charge is if I gently tap my shift key, but it's hard to do that in the heat of the moment.

Customers may choose to create a login for the new customer portal to access all features, or make a one-time payment with just an account number and customer ID (found on the top left of the new utility bills.)

There is always a utility bill associated with a property unless the property has no impervious (non-absorbent) area and no water service line. Inactive water accounts are subject to a monthly minimum water bill and monthly stormwater charge. Utilities are billed monthly.

811 protects you and your community! Hitting a buried line while digging can disrupt utility service, cost money to repair, or cause serious injury or death. Always contact your 811 center, wait the required time for utilities to respond to your request, and ensure that all utilities have responded to your request before putting a shovel in the ground.

State laws vary, but generally, utility companies have a few days to respond to your request. Utilities will send out locators who will come to your dig site to mark the approximate location of buried utilities with paint or flags so that you can avoid them. Each utility type corresponds to a specific color of paint or a flag -- for example, gas lines are marked with yellow paint or flags. In addition to waiting for marks, you must use the info on your ticket to confirm that ALL utilities have responded before you can dig.

You called before digging, waited for your lines to be marked, confirmed that all utilities responded to your request, and now it's time to roll up your sleeves and get to work! Make sure to always dig carefully around the marks, not on them. Some utility lines may be buried at a shallow depth, and an unintended shovel thrust can bring you right back to square one -- facing potentially dangerous and/or costly consequences. Don't forget that erosion or root structure growth may shift the locations of your utility lines, so remember to call again each time you are planning a digging job.

If you are only planning to dig in a small portion of your yard, you can outline the area in white paint or white flags available at home improvement stores to ensure that only the utilities in that part of your yard will be located and marked. Be sure to let your 811 center know about your plans, and they will help ensure the proper area is marked by utility locators.

At VPLC, we pride our commitment to go where the needs of low-income families take us. From the bread and butter issues that have always been tackled at legal aid, such as landlord-tenant or family law issues, to new and emerging issues that have become part of the landscape or landmines affecting low-income families across the commonwealth. Utilities have always been a huge part of housing affordability, but with the cost of some utilities such as electricity and water going up more than 30 percent over the last 10 years, and the simple fact that most utility services are monopolies across the state, it is a fair bet that consumers, particularly those who are low income, are not able to get the best cost for the services they have. Also many lower-income communities are at the forefront of issues dealing with the lower cost of energy efficiency and clean energy sources, but the lack of availability for those who need the true least-cost options the most.

We provide context to conversations around environmental justice and equity and the realities of health impacts and importance of cost to low-income consumers in the utility space.

Need to speak to someone about a utility issue?

As always utility bill payments may be made in person at the Village Hall, sent by US Mail to Village Hall, or placed in our 24-drop box. We request you provide your remittance slip for ease of processing.

Payment must be received at Village Hall on or before the due date to avoid penalty assessments. The current penalty of 3% will be assessed to outstanding utility account balances, not paid by the due date.

Because of its all-round shape you can use the utility knife to finely chop herbs, cut vegetables in shapes or even to clean meat. Of course, there are other knives for these tasks that will function a little better. But those knives can often only do that, while you can use the utility knife for almost anything.

You use the utility knife for almost all tasks in the kitchen. In terms of size, a utility knife is smaller than a chef's knife but bigger than paring knife. The blade is, on average, 15 cm, straight and enhanced with a sharp tip. As such you can use it to cut ingredients but also to peel fruits and vegetables. The blade is made from stainless steel, carbon steel or a combination of both. Stainless steel is maintenance-free, while carbon steel can be sharpened to razor-sharpness. The perfect materials for an all-rounder in the kitchen. The handle of a utility knife stands out. It is designed as such to make it feel great in hand, even when completely drenched in fruit and vegetable juices.

The blade varies from 15 to 20 cm long. Choose the length you need for the task at hand. Too long is impractical when working on small accurate tasks, and with a blade that is too short you always feel yourself asking for more blade. The shape of the blade can vary, like a narrow blade for precise cutting tasks or a broader blade for chopping tasks.

Not in the mood to constantly switch knives when preparing a meal? A utility knife is the perfect solution. It might not be as perfect for individual tasks such as a tomato knife, carving knife, or peeling knife, but it does enable you to keep working.

To properly maintain your utility knife, it is key to properly clean it after use, using a mild soap. Besides cleaning, you should also sharpen your utility knife on a regular basis. How often you should sharpen your knife depends on how often you use it.

A utility knife has a short blade and a chef's knife a large, broad blade. You use a chef's knife for the more demanding cutting tasks and chopping larger ingredients. You use a utility knife for the lighter cutting tasks.

No. The knife is versatile but cannot be used for all cutting tasks. The more demanding tasks such as cutting larger pieces of meat or chopping through bones are not to be carried out with a utility knife. For these tasks, it is better to use a specific knife.

"Renewables are now mainstream and fossil fuels are the alternative," California Energy Commission (CEC) Chair David Hochschild told regulators, utility executives and analysts at the conference. With new zero-emissions mandates, "we will need a diversity of renewable resources to keep the system reliable, and we will need CSP, particularly, because of its long duration storage [potential]."

Ambitious 100% renewables mandates drive indiscriminate procurement of the lowest-cost renewable kWh, utility executives and regulators said. But the transitioning power system requires broader value, even if the per-kWh price is higher.

Restructuring markets, policies and utility planning to compensate investments in resources with a higher overall grid value, despite higher capital expenditures, will be necessary to deliver a reliable, low carbon power system, they added.

In 2010, the U.S. had 0.4 GW of CSP and only 0.1 GW of utility-scale PV. But cumulative CSP installations reached only 1.7 GW by 2020, while falling panel costs led to the installation of 35.4 GW of utility-scale PV by 2020, Wood Mackenzie Senior Analyst for U.S. utility-scale solar Colin Smith emailed Utility Dive.

Monetizing CSP will require new incentives that value its unique set of system benefits "instead of valuing the least cost resource," former Nevada utility commissioner Rebecca Wagner told Utility Dive. Advocates need to make the case to regulators that "CSP may cost more, but its storage allows using renewables overgeneration to flatten peak demand and fill gaps when wind or PV are not producing."

Zero-emission dispatchable resources like CSP, stored hydro, and geothermal can provide system stability and offer more value than a utility investment in hardware, because the utility gets clean energy with the expenditure for system stability, Lew said. But there are few incentives or market mechanisms to compensate utilities and developers for those investments, so "PV and batteries will be built because they are cheap and fast" and hardware will remain the main tool for system stability.

The size of investment in resources like CSP and the time it takes to develop them are also "very daunting" for a regulated utility, Arizona Public Service (APS) Vice President for Public Policy Barbara Lockwood told the conference.

Suppose bundle $c^*$ solves the UMP but not EMP. Let $c'$ solve EMP. Then (1) amount spent on $c^*$ greater then that on $c'$ and so $u(c') \geq u(c^*) $ because obviously spending more means worse off or same utility. But (2) by local nonsatiation a consumption there exists a bundle $c''$ close enough to $c'$ such that amount spent on $c''$ is less than amount spent on $c^*$ and $u(c'') > u(c^*)$. (3) Contradiction because we assumed $c^*$ solves UMP. e24fc04721

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