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A qualified domestic relations order (or QDRO, pronounced "cue-dro" or "qua-dro"), is a judicial order in the United States, entered as part of a property division in a divorce or legal separation that splits a retirement plan or pension plan by recognizing joint marital ownership interests in the plan, specifically the former spouse's interest in that spouse's share of the asset.
Quadrennial Defense Review, a former four-yearly review of US military objectives; Qatar Domain Registry, the operator of the .qa ccTLD; WQDR-FM, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA; a radio station, station QDR in region W; operating as "94.7 QDR"
SOCKS Protocol Version 5: March 1996: SOCKS5: RFC 1939 : Post Office Protocol - Version 3: May 1996: POP v 3: RFC 1945 : Hypertext Transfer Protocol—HTTP/1.0: May 1996: HTTP v 1.0: RFC 1948 : Defending Against Sequence Number Attacks: May 1996: IP spoofing: RFC 1950 : ZLIB Compressed Data Format Specification version 3.3: May 1996: Zlib v 3.3 ...
An individual RT ticket in Request Tracker 5. Organizations of all sizes use Request Tracker to track and manage workflows, customer requests, and internal project tasks of all sorts. Among other things, RT offers custom ticket lifecycles, seamless email integration, configurable automation, and detailed permissions and roles.
The Order had its world premiere at the 81st Venice International Film Festival on August 31, 2024, where it competed for the Golden Lion. [11] In May 2024, Vertical acquired U.S. distribution rights to the film, and released it on December 6, 2024 in a limited theatrical release [12] [13] in 600-700 theaters. [14]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President Donald Trump has officially announced the creation of an advisory group aimed at carrying out dramatic cuts to the U.S. government, attracting immediate ...
Retransmission, essentially identical with automatic repeat request (ARQ), is the resending of packets which have been either damaged or lost. Retransmission is one of the basic mechanisms used by protocols operating over a packet switched computer network to provide reliable communication (such as that provided by a reliable byte stream, for example TCP).
Is there a way to get a count of the number of just plain old ordinary articles, excluding the other types? (A percentage from a sample set is good enough; I'd like to be able to write a sentence like "Of the 6.9 million articles, 6.2 million are regular articles, 0.45 million are lists, and 0.2 million are disambig pages.")