When applying for jobs you need to pay attention to details and
simple errors like these will give a very bad impression.
It's not unusual to see stories misreported in some way or another — from
simple errors like misidentifying the parties to more glaring problems in interpreting the decision.
They learn that even inked corrections to
simple errors like miscalculations and misspellings provide evidence of attention to accuracy and detail.
Not exact matches
Like with personal FICO scores, information may be misattributed, or a
simple clerical
error on somebody's part could always happen.
'' The team were unlucky against Serbia, it's as
simple as that and just
like the loss to South Africa, we didn't play to our potential with too many individual
errors proving costly.
Arguably though people tend to make judgements on far
simpler things,
like whether they look the part (what Malcolm Gladwell calls the Warren Harding
Error), or come across as likeable people.
Decisions in the lab do not have a
simple endpoint
like getting to the summit, nor do laboratory
errors have immediate life - or - death consequences.
If there is a spelling
error, a
simple finger press will bring up the correction, sending an email can now be at the press of the prominent top right - hand button, leafing through photos can now be done on the screen, as can some neat tricks
like flicking through blog posts in the browser.
Simple things
like paying down balances on high - interest credit cards, and checking your credit report for
errors and correcting them, can help to boost your credit score and make you eligible for better rates on loans and financing packages.
Like with personal FICO scores, information may be misattributed, or a
simple clerical
error on somebody's part could always happen.
Nope, a
simple math
error like that will likely be fixed by the IRS.
Some
errors can be
simple,
like misspelling your name or having the wrong address, but there can be
errors in how lenders are reporting to the credit bureaus, and those
errors should be fixed immediately.
It sounds
like such a
simple thing that many people have told me that they are sure that someone must have discovered the
error before I did.
Again, seems to me
like a pretty
simple error — mostly a reflection of not being very careful.
Indeed, the results do depend on the model used and, as pointed out by Cohn and Lins, 2005,
simple models (
like REML) do not capture the complexity of long - term persistence — that's why results based on the use of
simple models are in
error.
It is a grave
error to extrapolate from a
simple thought experiment about an ice cube melting in a glass to a prediction of the behaviour of a vast and interconnected system
like the arctic ocean.
The problems I encountered were: (1) obfuscation ensured lawyers were the only conduit into the system (the process is now easy to understand with all of the new services and interactive flowcharts); (2) most of my legal fees where for services that did not require a law degree; (3) the most expensive
errors were legal
errors and there was no reasonable recourse for recovery; (4) the court administration was unable to handle the volume; (5)
simple but essential administrative tasks,
like filing documents, required either half a day or $ 100 + for every single filing; (6) Security and privacy are completely ignored, unlike every other profession; (7) there is no incentive, nor is there a governing body to ensure the matter is handled in an ethical, humane, timely manner; (8) lawyers have a monopoly and charge more than the market can bear for personal litigation.
There are many sources of waste and
error: pressures on young associates to bill large numbers of hours; billing time in inappropriate increments (the industry standard is 0.1 - hour increments, but some firms don't follow that); insufficient training; and
simple carelessness,
like not entering time until the end of the week and then having to piece things together from memory.
Like I said,
simple, but for anyone who's ever attempted to correct a spelling
error by touching the text, this thing is a godsend.
Nothing says, «I'm not detail - oriented»
like simple grammar
errors.
Some of the mistakes to look out for are
simple typos, grammatical or spelling
errors, lack of contact detail updates, missing referees contact details, paragraph issues, or other formatting mistakes, and the
like.
Deals have come undone over what seems
like a
simple error.