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  2. Error-tolerant design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Error-tolerant_design

    An error-tolerant design (or human-error-tolerant design [1]) is one that does not unduly penalize user or human errors. It is the human equivalent of fault tolerant design that allows equipment to continue functioning in the presence of hardware faults, such as a "limp-in" mode for an automobile electronics unit that would be employed if ...

  3. Inclusive design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inclusive_design

    Universal design is design for everyone: the term was coined by Ronald Mace in 1980, and its aim is to produce designs that all people can use fully, without the need for adaptations. Universal design originated in work on the design of built environments, though its focus has expanded to encompass digital products and services as well. [13]

  4. Universal design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_design

    Universal design is the design of buildings, products or environments to make them accessible to people, regardless of age, disability, or other factors. It emerged as a rights -based, anti- discrimination measure, which seeks to create design for all abilities.

  5. Universal design for instruction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_design_for...

    The Center for Universal Design at NCSU established a set of Principles of Universal Design [5] based on UD to guide and evaluate the design process, with a goal toward creating more accessible products and environments. Universal Design for Instruction is an educational framework and set of strategies that applies both UD and the Principles of ...

  6. Error analysis for the Global Positioning System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Error_analysis_for_the...

    These delayed signals cause measurement errors that are different for each type of GPS signal due to its dependency on the wavelength. [4] A variety of techniques, most notably narrow correlator spacing, have been developed to mitigate multipath errors. For long delay multipath, the receiver itself can recognize the wayward signal and discard it.

  7. Eastin–Knill theorem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastin–Knill_theorem

    Transversal gates, which perform a gate between two logical qubits each of which is encoded in N physical qubits by pairing up the physical qubits of each encoded qubit ("code block"), and performing independent gates on each pair, can be used to perform fault tolerant but not universal quantum computation because they guarantee that errors don ...

  8. Software fault tolerance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software_Fault_Tolerance

    Following design patterns should be combined together to make the system more fault tolerant: retry, fallback, timeout, circuit breaker, and bulkhead pattern. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] To make your system more fault tolerant, you should measure 99th percentile latency and keep the remaining 1% (aka tail latencies) in check through self healing mechanisms.

  9. Error correction code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Error_correction_code

    Locally decodable codes are error-correcting codes for which single bits of the message can be probabilistically recovered by only looking at a small (say constant) number of positions of a codeword, even after the codeword has been corrupted at some constant fraction of positions.