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Technology Stocks : Discuss Year 2000 Issues

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To: re3 who wrote (9452)12/18/1999 2:48:00 PM
From: flatsville  Read Replies (1) of 9818
 
This is certainly the most interesting (and weirdest) thing I've read recently...

defenselink.mil

Fair Use/etc...

DoD Uses New Information Technology to Battle Y2K


By Paul Stone

American Forces Press Service

ARLINGTON, Va. -- To be a guest in the Arlington Institute's "fusion center"
here feels much like being a guest on the bridge of the Starship Enterprise.
Both are futuristic in substance and style and both offer a glimpse of uncharted
territory.

But unlike the Enterprise's make-believe view of the stars and planets, the view
from the fusion center is a map of Earth surrounded by hundreds of key words
that dance about in a verbal minuet.

The center is in the forefront of the information age. It gathers data from
literally thousands of sources throughout the world, synthesizes it and uses it
to predict people's behavior. The ultimate goal is to understand how society
might react to regional or global events, such as terrorism, political
instabilities or even Y2K, director John Petersen said.

Standing in front of a wall-sized computer screen, he explained how the center
combines the best available technologies with some of the brightest minds in the
fields of social and political behavior. By harnessing the power of computers
with the insight of the human mind, the center develops models to help predict
how events might unfold in the future.

The computer screen's display of a map of the world illustrates the global
nature of problems and society's interconnectedness, Petersen said. The words
that move about the map -- oil, Y2K, defense, cyberterrorism and others --
represent just a few of the search words the center uses to gather information
from databases.

"This is an extraordinary time in history," Petersen said. "Because of the
information and technology available we're now able to look at large, complex
systems of data and discover patterns and shapes we couldn't see before. We can
look deeply into what used to seem like chaotic bits and pieces of information
and, combining it with the technology of computers, make some sense out of it."

The institute is using Y2K as a test case for its recently opened fusion center,
and DoD is right alongside. The Pentagon has teamed up with the institute to
help in its battle against Y2K.

According to Kevin Kirsch, who handles legislative liaison in DoD's Y2K office,
the fusion center data will help fill in a critical information gap.

"We've got a good handle on our own systems, which ones have been fixed and
which ones still need to be tested," he said. "But it would be nice to know how
people might react to Y2K, what they are doing to prepare and how they will
handle any problems that come up."

Kirsch said his office answers questions from the public every day concerning
Y2K. Most questions concern DoD-only Y2K repair efforts, but many cover a wide
spectrum of Y2K concerns.

"We have found it helps if we can just ease people's concerns, no matter what
the Y2K issue is," he said.

The fusion center monitors press reports from almost 200 news media outlets and
gathers information from databases using a program called "Starlight,"
originally developed by Pacific Northwest Laboratories for the intelligence
community. Petersen said Starlight streams information into a database 24 hours
a day and filters it according to key search words. He added that the program
looks for relationships between data and clusters it, providing a more complete
picture of the problem being studied.

"For example, if you wanted to look at the national electrical grid as it
relates to Y2K, Starlight could gather and cluster information and then produce
a three-dimensional representation on a map of the United States showing where
problems might occur," Petersen said.

In addition, the fusion center polls Americans across the country almost daily
to track their fears, preparations and attitudes about Y2K.

"Having this up-to-date latest information helps us alleviate concerns and, in
the long run, will increase awareness and preparedness," Kirsch said. This is
not only important for Jan. 1, when the millennium bug hits, but for many weeks
beyond, he added.

"Many experts believe that only 10 percent to 15 percent of what will actually
go wrong will happen on Jan. 1," Kirsch said. "Some programs will likely start
building up errors that will not be evident until later in the month when the
first payroll of the year is processed or when inventories are performed. Then
we have the leap year transition at the end of February, and in our testing
we've encountered just as many problems for that as we have for Jan. 1."

The leap year problem is that software not programmed to recognize 2000 as a
leap year will read Feb. 29 as March 1. The Y2K problem stems from a past
computer programming shorthand of expressing years in two digits -- 1999 would
be "99." Some computer systems on Jan. 1 might treat "00" as "1900" and
malfunction or shut down. Almost any computer system could be vulnerable, so all
must be checked and fixed or replaced.

Petersen said the Y2K scenario is an excellent example of the type of research
the fusion center makes possible.

"We're particularly interested in big surprises, global surprises that are
potentially disruptive and intrinsically out of control, whether it's an energy
revolution, global epidemic or Y2K," he said. "We know what can happen on the
technical side. What we're examining is the human side -- how people are
reacting. The fusion center is an exciting initiative and we think it's going to
provide valuable information."


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