In US Grant's memoirs, he was very open about his conduct and decisions he made during the US Civil War. Grant noted that he at times failed to understand the power of the defense against offensive assaults. He wrote that he regretted ordering the May 22, 1863 assault at Vicksburg, along with the final assault at Cold harbor in 1864.
Because we were not capable of precision bombing that would guarantee that dropping them on a purely military site would even hit the military target (we missed the target at Nagasaki by 1.9 miles!), thus it was vital that the military site be embedded in an urban area to ensure that dramatic and significant damage would happen even if the intended military site remained unscathed due to bombing errors. Many potential purely military sites in Japan were deliberately left off the target list as they were too far from a major city to be certain that the desired damage would happen if the bomb was dropped in the wrong place due to errors.
General Crowder played in 33 games at pitcher for the Detroit Tigers in 1935, starting in none of them. He made 10 putouts, had 31 assists, and committed no errors, equivalent to 0 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in). He had 5 double plays.
General Stafford played in 6 games at third base for the New York Giants in 1894, starting in none of them. He made 8 putouts, had 10 assists, and committed 6 errors, equivalent to 1 errors per game (estimate based on total games played in). He had one double play.
During the 1960's Soviet & Red Chinese military forces did have some border clashes; map reading (Land Navigation) errors were blamed for the problems.
The Soviets and Red Chinese were both communists, but like anyone having neighbors, they did have border disputes, the latest was probably in 1969...a clash of arms...blamed on map reading errors by the participants during military manuevers.
General protection fault errors.
general protection fault
French General Maurice Gamelin had seriously miscalculated the German offensive in 1940. On May 19, 1940, General Maxime Weygand was called out of retirement to head France's military defenses. Weygand was 73 years old, however, it is said he looked and acted like a man in his 50's. Weygand, on May 19, 1940 was given a difficult task in making up for Gamelin's errors.
show interfaces <interface name> extensive Also, #show log messages to see general system errors rather than just interface specific errors.
General debugging techniques include using exceptions and using the debugger to step-into certain sections of code to check for errors.
I'll do this from memory, so someone may be able to correct my errors and omissions. Washington - army general Jackson- army general W. Harrison - army general Taylor- army general Pierce- army brigadier general Lincoln- volunteer militia Grant- army general Hayes- army officer Garfield- army officer B. Harrison - army officer McKinley- army officer T. Roosevelt- army officer Truman- army officer Eisenhower- army general Kennedy- navy Nixon- navy Ford- navy Reagan- army Carter-navy G.H.W.Bush- air force
Union General Rosecrans was not the first general to openly criticize the Union's war efforts, nor would he be the last. In early 1863 he informed General Henry Halleck that he believed fatal errors by the US military were caused by impatient actions influenced by politics. He also said that decisions to advance were not made by first examining the logistics required to keep an advancing army fully supplied.
Overestimating enemy numbers, through faulty intelligence supplied to him by Allan Pinkerton.
Well you should have a general liability policy that covers the business and you should also have an errors and omissions policy that covers you for any errors or omissions that you my be responsible for.
Because we were not capable of precision bombing that would guarantee that dropping them on a purely military site would even hit the military target (we missed the target at Nagasaki by 1.9 miles!), thus it was vital that the military site be embedded in an urban area to ensure that dramatic and significant damage would happen even if the intended military site remained unscathed due to bombing errors. Many potential purely military sites in Japan were deliberately left off the target list as they were too far from a major city to be certain that the desired damage would happen if the bomb was dropped in the wrong place due to errors.
Errors & Omission Insurance is suggested.
General Protection Fault errors, system hangs, issues with video.