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No system could have been less efficient or more prone to human error.
"It's just amazing how prone to human error they are," says Sheldrick.
Intelligence officials insist that "technologically complex" surveillance activities will always be prone to human error.
While this seems to be a simple low-tech proposal to ensure safety, it is still prone to human error.
But then I got a gas grill, which can provide consistent heat, making the recipe less prone to human error.
When computers are the actors, though, detection is faster and not prone to human errors or failings, making defection less likely.
But consider: there are hundreds, perhaps thousands, of things doctors do that are at least as dangerous and prone to human failure as putting central lines into I.C.U.
Tucker Eskew, a spokesman for the Bush campaign, again said that the hand recount was prone to human error, warning that the small squares known as chads that were to be punched out by voters would be worn by overuse.
While national outrage has focused on Mr. Garzón, the largest union of railway workers has insisted that the surveillance system tracking the train's speed was partly blame since it was too prone to human error.
While national outrage has focused on Mr. Garzón, the largest union of railway workers has insisted that the surveillance system tracking the train's speed was partly to blame since it was prone to human error.
They have, furthermore, done what I have not heard of the Saudis or Belarussians doing, invaded another country (with their allies) and tried to keep it under control, a situation prone to human rights abuses.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com