Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
On 30 April 2013 an operating error rendered two of the three emergency reactors unusable.
Meatware and jellyware are most often used by internal customer support personnel as slang terms when referencing human operating errors.
Students also are required to disassemble and successfully reassemble computer equipment as well as troubleshoot and correct operating errors.
Although operating errors by the three were blamed for the May 5 crash, the tests found no evidence of drugs or alcohol in the crew members from either train.
Operating errors played an important role at Three Mile Island, experts say, and that accident had a greater impact on the American industry than did Chernobyl.
Mr. Ducharme said, "This is serious, this has me concerned, " adding that "each operating error has to be analyzed."
Hennie Harmse, manager of the Johannesburg Electricity Supply Commission, said: "It was an operating error.
However, after a few days, a SIGCUM operator made a serious operating error, retransmitting the same message twice using the same machine settings, producing a depth.
Those predictions ran afoul of the gritty technical details of generating nuclear power, including the realities of reactor safety, nuclear waste disposal and the potential for human operating errors.
Operating errors would occur from adjusting the wheel, as the wheel tended to slide as it was dragged across the face of the spinning disc as it was adjusted.
In one instance, a pupil's dissertation was "lost" through an operating error but a number of pupils divided up the work, which was in final draft, took it to the computer room and keyed in the text in sections.
'Unprofessional Performance' Mr. Henning and other Northwest officers insisted that the operating errors cited by Mr. Martin did not reflect any pervasive problems at the airline, which he said operates about 800 DC-9 flights a day.
Since last August, when operating errors at one reactor led to a power surge and other potentially dangerous incidents, the Energy Department has made public memorandums and reports sharply critical of the capabilities of reactor operators and their superiors at the plant and in the department.
To the Editor: Re "Ms. Fiorina's Fatal Operating Error" (editorial, Feb. 11): You are correct in identifying Hewlett-Packard's merger with Compaq as the main source of problems for Carleton S. Fiorina, Hewlett's chief executive, who was dismissed by the company.