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Error! just a little josie poking through the crack between us.
But he leading lines that lead you to nothing, cool eh?
- Uploaded with a demo version of FlickrExport 2.
For every mistake, Garmin express server error shows a message with a blunder code on the screen. In this way, you can
distinguish the issue easily. www.garminsmapupdates.com/garmin-express-displays-server-...
Finding the postcode, state, & suburb is often tricky. We use an autocomplete field to query our Really Big list of postcodes and suburbs and such - reduces the amount of input error markedly.
Adjustment error happens when you make decisions about whose answers you use.
Jarrett, Caroline, 2021. Surveys That Work: A Practical Guide for Designing Better Surveys. New York: Rosenfeld Media.
Instead of handing in the laptop, somebody wrote "Doesn't work!!!" on the shift button, and left it where it was.
The people in helpdesk will probably find out some day. Handing it in to them would probably have been a better idea.
No idea how this happened but it appears that Liverpool vs Eveton was playing at the Louvre in Paris...
"Consulte sus inquietudes con el guardaparque". ¿Por ejemplo si existe dios? ¿Por ejemplo quiénes somos, de dónde venimos y a dónde vamos, si estamos solos en la galaxia o acompañados? (Siniestro Total). Isla Victoria, Patagonia argentina. 2007 © Sonia de Viana
Sometimes you just despair looking at error messages on computer programs. Prime candidate today - Outlook 2010. Unless I've been to hospital, this isn't really helpful at all.
Theatre and Dance performed A Comedy of Errors on November 22, 2019. Jesse Scheve/Missouri State University
November 10, 2018 at 2:00pm- 3:30pm at Centrespace Gallery, VRC
Taking this idea as a starting point, we would like you to interpret this principle
Sustain your errors, is a series of workshops and events re-interpreting a set of ideas by artist and musician David Cunningham first used for his 1976 album Grey Scale.
In an introduction to the project taking place during NEoN, writer Cicely Farrer invites artist Katie Hare to together explore the ‘error system’ in the algorithmic age, through dialogue, sound, projection and human movement, extending Cunningham’s album in a new performative encounter.
Katie Hare is an artist whose work examines the effects of the increasing rapidity of technological progress, particularly with regards to memory and obsolescence and the way narrative and storytelling is shifting as a result of this development.
Introduction to David Cunningham’s Error System
David Cunningham’s art work evades visual description as it is mostly real-time sound based and site specific. His installations and performances are experienced across sound, music, light, movement and the architectures of space. He frequently uses a systems approach. This systems approach could be through a sound loop, overlapping cycles, a set of instructions, collaborative conditions or the space the work inhabits.
Sustain your errors draws on an early work of David’s, Grey Scale, for which he set up scores/instructions in the production of his sound work in the late 70s. In its original form, Grey Scale is an album that was originally released as a vinyl record in a grey card sleeve in 1976. The album features tracks which are played across a range of instruments, percussion, tape recorders, synthesisers and water.
The project is based on conversations between Cicely Farrer and David Cunningham around ways of interpreting the scores and their guiding principles. Cicely has received mentorship from artist Pernille Spence.
Supported by the National Lottery through Creative Scotland.
Image Credit: Kathryn Rattray Photography
November 10, 2018 at 2:00pm- 3:30pm at Centrespace Gallery, VRC
Taking this idea as a starting point, we would like you to interpret this principle
Sustain your errors, is a series of workshops and events re-interpreting a set of ideas by artist and musician David Cunningham first used for his 1976 album Grey Scale.
In an introduction to the project taking place during NEoN, writer Cicely Farrer invites artist Katie Hare to together explore the ‘error system’ in the algorithmic age, through dialogue, sound, projection and human movement, extending Cunningham’s album in a new performative encounter.
Katie Hare is an artist whose work examines the effects of the increasing rapidity of technological progress, particularly with regards to memory and obsolescence and the way narrative and storytelling is shifting as a result of this development.
Introduction to David Cunningham’s Error System
David Cunningham’s art work evades visual description as it is mostly real-time sound based and site specific. His installations and performances are experienced across sound, music, light, movement and the architectures of space. He frequently uses a systems approach. This systems approach could be through a sound loop, overlapping cycles, a set of instructions, collaborative conditions or the space the work inhabits.
Sustain your errors draws on an early work of David’s, Grey Scale, for which he set up scores/instructions in the production of his sound work in the late 70s. In its original form, Grey Scale is an album that was originally released as a vinyl record in a grey card sleeve in 1976. The album features tracks which are played across a range of instruments, percussion, tape recorders, synthesisers and water.
The project is based on conversations between Cicely Farrer and David Cunningham around ways of interpreting the scores and their guiding principles. Cicely has received mentorship from artist Pernille Spence.
Supported by the National Lottery through Creative Scotland.
Image Credit: Kathryn Rattray Photography
This bug's a mystery: when attempting to copy a file from one hard drive location to another, Vista complains it can't read the hard disk because of a network error.
Uh... OK.