Qualifying Outage Minutes definition

Qualifying Outage Minutes mean the aggregate of all minutes of a Verified Outage during a Measurement Period, minus any Excluded Minutes in that Measurement Period.
Qualifying Outage Minutes means the aggregate of all Outages in a month, minus any Outages in that month resulting from any exclusion described in Section 8.6 below.
Qualifying Outage Minutes means the aggregate of all Outages in a calendar month.

Examples of Qualifying Outage Minutes in a sentence

  • Any period of Qualifying Outage Minutes for a Service which is less than 30 continuous minutes shall not be eligible for an award of SLA Credits.

  • The following will not be included in the calculation of Total Qualifying Outage Minutes: (a) outages during scheduled maintenance windows or (b) emergency operational changes.

  • SLA Credits For each 30 continuous minute period of Qualifying Outage Minutes for a Service in a Measurement Period, Netpros shall provide an SLA Credit of 5% of the fees for the relevant Service which was subject to the Loss of Service during the Measurement Period.

  • For the purposes of calculating Total Qualifying Outage Minutes, each Qualifying Outage will (i) commence upon the earlier of (a) Cisco’s detecting the outage or (b) Cisco’s logging an Incident ticket upon Customer’s notice to Cisco of the outage with sufficient information for Cisco to confirm the outage; and (ii) end when the Core Cloud Services are fully restored.

  • SLA Credits For each 30 continuous minute period of Qualifying Outage Minutes for a Service in a Measurement Period, SoftLayer shall provide a SLA Credit of 5% of the fees for the relevant Service which was subject to the Loss of Service during the Measurement Period.

  • The following will be excluded from the calculation of Qualifying Outage Minutes: Scheduled maintenance or a scheduled outage OS and application outage Unavailability of Jazz Cloud Portal while Virtual Machines are running Any misconfiguration by customer on cloud portal.


More Definitions of Qualifying Outage Minutes

Qualifying Outage Minutes means the aggregate of all Outages in a month, minus any Outages in that month resulting from any exclusion described in Section A2.3.3.3 below. The Outage begins at the first failed polling attempt. The Outage ends when the first successful poll following the Outage begin time is re-ported by an IBM Measurement Centre.
Qualifying Outage Minutes means the aggregate of all minutes of a Verified Outage during a Measurement Period, minus any Excluded Minutes. “Services” means the services ordered by You and accepted by SoftLayer as provided in the MSA.

Related to Qualifying Outage Minutes

  • High voltage bus means the electrical circuit, including the coupling system for charging the REESS that operates on a high voltage.

  • Planned Outage means the removal of equipment from service availability for inspection and/or general overhaul of one or more major equipment groups. To qualify as a Planned Outage, the maintenance (a) must actually be conducted during the Planned Outage, and in Seller’s sole discretion must be of the type that is necessary to reliably maintain the Project, (b) cannot be reasonably conducted during Project operations, and (c) causes the generation level of the Project to be reduced by at least ten percent (10%) of the Contract Capacity.

  • Excluded Downtime has the meaning set forth in Section 2 below.

  • Bid with Lowest Evaluated Cost means the bid quoting lowest cost amongst all those bids evaluated to be substantially responsive;

  • Working voltage means the highest value of an electrical circuit voltage root-mean-square (rms), specified by the manufacturer, which may occur between any conductive parts in open circuit conditions or under normal operating condition. If the electrical circuit is divided by galvanic isolation, the working voltage is defined for each divided circuit, respectively.

  • Unplanned Outage refers to the unavailable status of the units of the Power Plant other than Planned Outage. Based on the urgency of the needs of outage, the Unplanned Outage can be classified into five categories: (1) immediate outage; (2) the outage which could be delayed for a short while but the units must exit within six hours; (3) the outage which could be postponed over six hours but the units must exit within seventy-two hours; (4) the outage which could be deferred over seventy-two hours but the units must exit before the next Planned Outage; and (5) the prolonged outage which is beyond the period of the Planned Outage.

  • B-BBEE status level of contributor means the B-BBEE status of an entity in terms of a code of good practice on black economic empowerment, issued in terms of section 9(1) of the Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment Act;

  • Top Level Domain means the portion of the Domain Name to the right of the right-most period. (In the example, “COM”.) “Second Level Domain” means that portion of a domain name to the left of the right-most period, up to the second period from the right, if any, plus the Top Level Domain. (In the example, “XXXXXXXXX.XXX”.) “Third Level Domain” means that portion of a domain name to the left of the second period from the right, if any, up to the third period from the right, if any, plus the Second Level Domain. (In the example, “XXXXXXXXX.XXXXXXXXX.XXX”.).

  • high voltage means the classification of an electric component or circuit, if its working voltage is > 60 V and ≤ 1500 V DC or > 30 V and ≤ 1000 V AC root mean square (rms).

  • Total suspended particulate means particulate matter as measured by the method described in 40 CFR 50, Appendix B.

  • Combined sewer system means a system for conveying both sanitary sewage and storm water runoff.

  • Outage has the meaning set forth in the CAISO Tariff.

  • Core Network means the transport infrastructure identified in accordance with Chapter III of Regulation (EU) No 1315/2013;

  • Forced Outage means any unplanned reduction or suspension of the electrical output from the Facility resulting in the unavailability of the Facility, in whole or in part, in response to a mechanical, electrical, or hydraulic control system trip or operator-initiated trip in response to an alarm or equipment malfunction and any other unavailability of the Facility for operation, in whole or in part, for maintenance or repair that is not a scheduled maintenance outage and not the result of Force Majeure.