Then he went on two combat runs, sitting in a jump seat behind the primary navigator. |
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The pilot, navigator, and the gunner lived in three entirely separate social worlds. |
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The word is a diminutive of inland navigator, referring to the men who built the canals that preceded the railways. |
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The path navigator is a robot, which moves along a predefined path and gives a signal to the controller once it finds an obstacle. |
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Just as he's an expert guide through the between-spaces of the city, so he's a practised navigator through different psychic spaces. |
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The aircraft commander, pilot, navigator and flight engineer get the aircraft in and out of the storm safely. |
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Maura, my co-pilot and navigator, always had a higher opinion of the rookies than I did. |
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Later he worked for Pan Am as a first officer, flight engineer and navigator. |
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David Kendall is an accomplished white-water navigator who recently paddled the upper Ottawa River in Canada. |
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He was a brilliant navigator, a talented cartographer and a relatively humane captain by the standards of his time. |
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Drivers will draw lots and be assigned a navigator who will be handed over a map with the route in Braille. |
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The device also sports a large-size display, application launch buttons and five-way navigator control. |
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Pressing the iPaq's navigator control to the left calls up the software's main menu. |
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Alongside the navigator are two application buttons, invoking the Calendar and Contacts applications. |
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You have this advanced data browser, and if you want it, the simple, one-window web navigator like approach. |
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You can conveniently control the cursor with a separate navigator control pad, scroll dial on the side or the stylus. |
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This connection makes the flowcharting software act as a front-end navigator to the back-end system. |
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To take a still image or video, you press the center of a five-way navigator button or tap an onscreen button. |
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The left-hand side of x3i presents the obligatory jog-dial navigator and a 3.5mm headphone jack. |
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Its styles capability is easier to work with and it has a navigator window which is useful for long documents. |
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In the lounge was the navigator console, various computers hidden in the walls for research, sofas, tables, and reading material. |
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Pocket-ShPIDER as navigator displays the GPS position corrected with SISNeT inside an interactive map. |
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Beneath it is a navigator button, though this time it's oblong rather than round. |
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At high frequency, the user position and velocity estimates of the navigator are fed back to the GPS tracking loops. |
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No less a navigator than Capt. James Cook failed to find the strait 180 years later, in fact. |
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Captain James Cook is widely renowned as an explorer, pioneering navigator and preventer of scurvy. |
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The Portuguese navigator Vasco da Gama explored the East African coast in 1498 on his voyage to India. |
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The ship's main navigator pulled a profound breath as he nodded without looking back. |
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A 53-year-old car navigator died yesterday after being knocked down at a motor rally in Aberdeenshire. |
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A mild breeze lifted the sails and the ship's navigator was confident the fog would blow away, but the weather made many in the crew uneasy. |
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The ship's navigator stood there, tall and smiling, hands behind his back but completely at ease by all other appearances. |
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Andrew, who completed his navigator training at RAAF Base East Sale, is now based at Richmond. |
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He said the ship's navigator was allegedly watching a football match when the ferry collided with the islet. |
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The bombardier and navigator were pleased that we had not run into anything but my spirits were low. |
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The aircraft commander, navigator, and flight engineer began to troubleshoot the system. |
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In 1773, English navigator and explorer Captain James Cook landed two merino sheep in the Marlborough Sounds, in the north of the South Island. |
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In 1642, the Dutch navigator, A. J. Tasman, reached New Zealand where Polynesian Maoris were inhabitants. |
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However, if absolutely necessary you could manage with a laptop in the passenger seat as your navigator. |
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No statistically significant difference existed in knowledge by task assignment of driver versus navigator. |
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Were clouds to close in, the aircraft would be reliant upon three instruments to aid the navigator. |
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The second world war interrupted his studies and he was called up into the Royal Air Force as a navigator. |
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In principle, if a ship had a clock keeping Greenwich time, the navigator could measure the angle of the Sun to note local noon and compare it to the clock. |
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Somehow Messinger, his copilot, the instructor pilot, and the navigator managed to eject from the airplane carrying the bombs. |
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Geographical positions were estimated by the GPS navigator of the ship. |
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The navigator was asleep, the flight engineer was doing touch-and-goes at his panel, and the pilots were task-saturated for the routine nature of what we were doing. |
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Wherever the peace process travels from here, the U.S. no longer is its navigator. |
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The navigator, David Marchant, a larger-than-life figure, had plotted a course to Florida that Nyad and her team trusted. |
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The navigator wrote down the numbers of the quadrants, read them back, and then got out of the way so the bombardier could set up his racks for the bomb run. |
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The navigator has a bombsight and celestial data as a guide. |
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An expert navigator and sailor, he competed in the Fastnet Race. |
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He was an artist and a ship's navigator before he became captain. |
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He was a master sailor and navigator and had sailed with his wife across the Channel and along to Brittany in thick fog long before the days of satellite navigation. |
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A year later, Italian navigator Amerigo Vespucci sailed to Brazil on a voyage commissioned by the Portuguese crown and returned home with a cargo of hard, reddish wood. |
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The city also boasts the tomb of William Adams, a British navigator who made it ashore when his ship was lost in nearby waters at the end of the 16th century. |
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However, you can clearly see the new navigator design and case styling. |
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The company's surgical navigator uses radiographic imaging to help a surgeon accurately guide cannulae and surgical instruments to targeted areas of the spine. |
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The competitor, partnered by his longstanding navigator, completed the entire course exactly on time and reported to all six checkpoints on time earning no debits. |
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We know how many river users are appalled at the way pilotage is being run and who are genuinely frightened to use the Humber without an experienced navigator. |
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The basis for the story is that in February 1704, William Dampier, a noted British buccaneer and navigator, arrived at Juan Fernandez with two ships, both licensed privateers. |
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Diogo Fernandes Pereira, a Portuguese navigator, was the first European known to land in Mauritius. |
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She is helmswoman, navigator, repairer, cook, dishwasher, doctor and camerawoman. |
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One of the most important judgments the navigator must make is the best method to use. |
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If the navigator draws two lines of position, and they intersect he must be at that position. |
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The search box in the homepage and setting a navigator to meet different needs of cell phone lovers makes shopping on TradeTang. |
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In 1497 Portuguese navigator Vasco da Gama rounded the Cape of Good Hope and became the first European to sail to India and later the Far East. |
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Out of 53 crewmen only the navigator, Peter Jensen, was a professional seaman. |
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During the transit, the navigator can check that the ship is on track by checking that the pip lies on the drawn line. |
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The navigator becomes a system manager, choosing system presets, interpreting system output, and monitoring vessel response. |
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This makes Saavedra the first navigator to cross the Pacific Ocean from the Americas. |
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Its visit was also reported in 1616 by the Dutch navigator Willem Schouten. |
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After 1506, he settled in the port of Dieppe in France, where he began his career as a navigator. |
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Eleven years later, the Dutch East India Company financed English navigator Henry Hudson in his search for the Northwest Passage. |
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He felt having a Micronesian navigator meant he needed a pureblooded Polynesian, preferably a Hawaiian, as captain. |
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Crews consisted of a pilot, flight engineer, bomb aimer, navigator, wireless operator, and front and rear gunners. |
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This parallel line allows the navigator to maintain a given distance away from hazards. |
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In typical GPS operation as a navigator, four or more satellites must be visible to obtain an accurate result. |
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A navigator shoots a number of stars in succession to give a series of overlapping lines of position. |
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Urdaneta was considered a great navigator and especially fitted for cruising in Indian waters. |
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Among the Teesside contingent to enjoy a good day was Guisborough navigator Mike Scrimgour, who teamed up with former hot-rodder Wayne Ward. |
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It was from here that Dutch navigator Abel Tasman set out to discover the western part of Australia. |
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Fred Noonan, her navigator, was too drunk to operate the equipment. |
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She eloped with her navigator, Fred Noonan, to escape her fame. |
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Enormous riches described by their pilot, an experienced Portuguese navigator hired by Raleigh, outweighed White's objections to the delay. |
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The Aberdeen pilot suffered 72 wounds in the attack and his navigator was killed as their Catalina flying boat came under heavy fire. |
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The navigator yeoman also pleaded guilty to attempting to murder Lieutenant Commander Christopher Hodge, 45, who he shot in the stomach. |
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In 1519, an expedition sent by the Spanish Crown to find a way to Asia was led by the experienced Portuguese navigator Ferdinand Magellan. |
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At that time, navigator Bartolomeu Dias had just arrived in Lisbon, after having reached the Cape of Good Hope. |
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The famous navigator, the first to round the Cape back in 1488, fatally fails to round it this time. |
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Finally the navigator Paul Vatine, who was lost at sea in 1999, won the Transat Jacques Vabre several times. |
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Tasman, his navigator Visscher, and his merchant Gilsemans also mapped substantial portions of Australia, New Zealand and the Pacific Islands. |
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By looking at the place where the shadow from the rod falls on a carved curve, a navigator is able to sail along a line of latitude. |
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He travelled with the pilot and cartographer Juan de la Cosa and the Italian navigator Amerigo Vespucci. |
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In 1501, another Portuguese navigator, Pedro d'Ataide, sought shelter in Mossel Bay after losing much of his fleet in a storm. |
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Around 1312 Genoese navigator Lancelotto Malocello came upon the Canary Islands. |
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His return was greeted with reserve and coldness in the court of Prince Henry, who had expected the navigator to succeed in rounding the Cape. |
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After his return from Ceuta, Henry the navigator founded a school of navigation in Sagres, which was a place to discuss the art of navigation. |
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The turtle symbolizes a navigator that can find his way home time after time. |
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The navigator also received simulated radio signals from various positions on the ground. |
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He was disqualified for pilot training due to his eyesight being below par, and was classified as a navigator trainee. |
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Knowing Greenwich time and comparing against local time from a common altitude sight, the navigator can work out his longitude. |
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The navigator precisely measures the angle between the moon and the sun, or between the moon and one of several stars near the ecliptic. |
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If a navigator measures the angle to Polaris and finds it to be 10 degrees from the horizon, then he is about 10 degrees north of the equator. |
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Merchant mariner Douglass North went from seaman to navigator to winner of the 1993 Nobel Prize in Economics. |
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Using multiple methods helps the navigator detect errors, and simplifies procedures. |
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At this time, a navigator on a ship at sea measured the Moon to be 56 degrees above the horizon using a sextant. |
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A compass deviation card is prepared so that the navigator can convert between compass and magnetic headings. |
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A trilingual stele left by the navigator was discovered on the island of Ceylon shortly thereafter. |
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This sea was given its present name in honor of Willem Barentsz, a Dutch navigator and explorer. |
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If the navigator measures the direction in real life, the angle can then be drawn on a nautical chart and the navigator will be on that line on the chart. |
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No navigator traverses them but bypasses them remaining near their coast. |
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The first ship and crew to chart the Australian coast and meet with Aboriginal people was the Duyfken captained by Dutch navigator, Willem Janszoon. |
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The first recorded voyage through the passage was that of Eendracht, captained by the Dutch navigator Willem Schouten in 1616, naming Cape Horn in the process. |
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Allegedly in the latter class was ship's navigator Abacuk Pricket, a survivor who kept a journal that was to become a key source for the narrative of the mutiny. |
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The most notable was the 1596 expedition led by Dutch navigator Willem Barentsz, who discovered Spitsbergen and Bear Island, and rounded the north end of Novaya Zemlya. |
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Surviving members telling their tale include bomb aimer Andy Wiseman, pilot Bill Lucas, rear gunners Bob Gill and Harry Irons, and navigator Harry Hughes. |
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A heated argument between an airplane captain and a navigator developed into a fistfight, delaying a domestic flight for four hours, local daily Okaz reported yesterday. |
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By mental navigation checks, a pilot or a navigator estimates tracks, distances, and altitudes which then will help him or her avoid gross navigation errors. |
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According to international law, a vessel's captain is legally responsible for passage planning, however on larger vessels, the task will be delegated to the ship's navigator. |
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They can navigate without a compass, because they have an astrologer, who stands on the side and, with an astrolabe in hand, gives orders to the navigator. |
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Roberval was to lead the expedition, with Cartier as his chief navigator. |
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Fixed to a dome above the cockpit was an arrangement of lights, some collimated, simulating constellations from which the navigator determined the plane's position. |
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