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Technology Stocks : Discuss Year 2000 Issues -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: flatsville who wrote (8611)9/10/1999 3:09:00 PM
From: flatsville  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9818
 
ft.com

Fair Use/etc...

Countries risk halt to US flights
More than 40 fail to respond to millennium bug inquiries. By Richard Wolffe in Washington

More than 40 countries risk having flights to and from the US halted if they fail to persuade international aviation authorities that their computer systems will function at the turn of the millennium.

Transport officials said yesterday the US must decide by next month whether to halt flights to the countries that have failed to respond to international inquiries about preparations for the millennium bug, which could cause computer systems to fail as the date changes to the year 2000.

The countries represent a third of those asked to supply information to the International Civil Aviation Organisation, which sets international flight standards.

Kenneth Mead, inspector general of the Department of Transportation, told two congressional panels yesterday that more than 5m US passengers flew to those countries last year.

Mr Mead said the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) must decide by October 15 whether to halt those flights altogether.

"Policy still needs to be established as to whether US carriers or US code-share flights will be allowed to fly to countries that either did not respond or cannot give sufficient assurance that they are year 2000-ready," he said. "Time is running out."

At the end of August, the unnamed countries yet to respond included 18 in Asia and the Pacific region, 12 in South America, eight in the former Soviet Union and eastern Europe and one in western Europe.

The state department plans to release next week the first country-by-country assessment of year 2000 risks, alongside recommendations for precautions to be taken by US citizens abroad.

The report will be the first US government report to highlight the dangers of year 2000 problems around the world, although officials warn that their findings will stress the uncertain nature of any predictions.

The House subcommittees on technology and government management heard how the FAA still faced significant challenges in dealing with "external" risks from foreign air systems - in spite of turning around its own internal computer problems in the last 18 months.

The General Accounting Office, the investigative arm of Congress, said only a third of 146 major international airlines had already ensured their computer systems were ready for the year 2000.

Another third planned to complete their preparations by the end of this month, while a final third planned to do so later or simply failed to provide a date at all.

The GAO said the authorities also needed to ensure US airports were ready for the year 2000 problem, as 22 per cent of airports said they would not complete preparations by the end of this month.



To: flatsville who wrote (8611)9/11/1999 9:10:00 AM
From: flatsville  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9818
 
A few more 9s problems?

Fair Use/etc... on below:

yomiuri.co.jp

Date suspected in hospital computer error

Yomiuri Shimbun

MITO -- A computer-assisted device that monitors patients' vital signs malfunctioned--possibly as a result of a date-related error--for about five minutes Thursday morning at a general hospital in Ibaraki Prefecture, prefectural government officials said Friday.

The error, which began at 9:09 a.m., was spotted during a test to determine how the system would be affected by the arrival of Sept. 9, 1999--a date which it reads as a series of nines, and which could be interpreted by some computers as a command to shut down. The device, which records the breathing, blood pressure and heart rate of patients, could not record data for the duration of the malfunction.

Although the error did not affect any patients, the prefectural government ordered the hospital, located in the southern part of the prefecture, to further investigate the cause of the trouble.

With the cooperation of the Health and Welfare Ministry, the prefectural government on Thursday ordered 95 medical facilities to fax it reports on any computer problems they may have experienced as a result of the date.

According to the fax report sent by the hospital, a printout of data from the affected computer-assisted device system came out blank for five minutes starting at 9:09 a.m.

home.kyodo.co.jp

Okinawa firefighters' computer zapped by '9999' bug

Firefighters using a computer on Ishigakijima Island in Okinawa
Prefecture found the date set back some 30 years on Thursday in a
computer error blamed on the '9999' bug, fire department officials
said Friday.
The error did not hamper the duties of firefighters at an
emergency command center in the city of Ishigaki and was repaired
Thursday, they said.