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


To: C.K. Houston who wrote (825)1/3/1998 12:11:00 PM
From: Josef Svejk  Respond to of 9818
 
Humbly report, Cheryl, the last two weeks sure have seen a lot of y2k press - Happy New Year everyone!

year2000.com

January 6, 1998:

PC Magazine: Bugged by the Year 2000

January 5, 1998:

InformationWeek: 1998:Year Of Conversions -- Making systems comply with the year 2000 and Europe's new currency should keep IS departments busy this year

InformationWeek: Surge In Services -- Year 2000, labor shortages, and profitability goals drive services demand

InformationWeek: Conversion Crunch -- Businesses turn to automated tools to complete year 2000 compliance efforts

InformationWeek: Resellers, Integrators In Demand -- IT buyers will seek top-notch partners for their '98 projects

InformationWeek: IT Spending In '98:Full Speed Ahead -- Despite the global economy's volatility, most senior

Computer Reseller News: Year 2000 sales go bust -- Analysts see pluses and minuses ahead in 1998

January 2, 1998:

Houston Chronicle: Old programmers newly in demand

Denver Post: 2000 glitch may hit shoppers in plastic Some card readers reject expiration date

The Guardian: Blair leads action on millennium bug

The Daily Telegraph London: MILLENNIUM TIME BOMB PART 2: The ubiquitous microchip is infected by the millennium bug

Washington Post: 'Year 2000' Preview: Computer Flaw Already Bars Some Credit Card Processing

USA Today: More mega-mergers expected in 1998

Reuters/News.com: Latest Y2K weapon: hard copies

Financial Times: UK: Blair set to seek EU action over millennium 'bomb' (requires free registration)

January 1, 1998:

The Salt Lake Tribune: Utah Has Year 2000 Under Control

The Tampa Tribune: Year 2000

London Times: Bug ban looms over 2000 party

London Times: Race to beat the Year 2000 bug

London Times: Tips for businesses on how to tackle technological terror

San Francisco Chronicle: Year 2000 Fixers Haven't Hit Pay Dirt

January 1998:

BYTE: 1998 is the watershed year for Y2K readiness. If you don't have a plan, plan on problems

DBMS Magazine: Year 2000: A Warm-Up Exercise?

DBMS Magazine: Oracle Year 2000 Pitfalls

DBMS Magazine: Social Security and Year 2000

DBMS Magazine: Testing Year 2000 Solutions

December 31, 1997:

The Australian: The bug that ate business

The Australian: Only 731 days to save the world a trillion

The Australian: $600m too little, too late: Reserve

The Australian: Industry reliance means risk

The Australian: Telstra irons out 9 million phone lines

The Australian: Airlines maintain the friendly skies

NEWSWire/400 Newswatch Weekly: IBM Drops All BP Products That Are Not Y2K Ready

PC Week: 1998: D-Day for Y2K

Reuters: Technology expert offers this simple solution -- make a hard copy

Washington Post: Millennium Goals Keep World Busy

San Francisco Chronicle: Banks Spending Billions to Avoid 2000 Snafu: Financial transactions will grind to a halt if problem is not fixed

San Francisco Chronicle: Few Options Left to Fix the Problem

San Francisco Chronicle: Flood of Lawsuits Expected From Year 2000 Snafu Lawyers look to cash in on date problem

CNNfn: Tech professionals costly

Investor's Business Daily: Could Chicken Little Be Right? (requires free registration)

The Times of London: Year 2000 brings benefits for the Third World

Financial Times: Public sector: Computer 'bomb' may cost œ3bn (requires free registration)

December 30, 1997:

San Francisco Chronicle: Fixes Today May Trouble Us Tomorrow

San Francisco Chronicle: Facing the Millennium: Vigilant consumers can avoid pitfalls

San Francisco Chronicle: World Lags on 2000 Crisis

San Francisco Chronicle: Computer Date With Disaster: Many firms can't fix 2000 snafu before the millennium

USA Today: Software makers upgrade for Year 2000

The Daily Telegraph London: Bug beds in for a date Analysis

Channel 6000: Year 2000 Sparks Computer Fears: Malfunction Could Impact World Systems

December 29, 1997:

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Small businesses may run into big trouble on Jan. 1, 2000

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Consultant thinks small in finding Y2K solution

Los Angeles Times: Valley Newswatch

Laissez Faire City Times: Computer Time Problem 2000: Disaster or Window of Opportunity

The Guardian: CBI warns firms may go bust unless they defuse millennium time-bomb

Boulder Daily Camera: Government lags on millennium bug

BBC News: Warning over Millennium timebomb

Time Magazine: Santa Meets Goldilocks

Business Week: Year 2000: The Meter's Running: The cost of defusing the millennium bomb is exploding

Computerworld New Zealand: A Look at What's Coming in '98

December 28, 1997:

The Detroit News: A Job is Waiting: Software services firm in Troy seeks 100 mainframe programers

The Times of London: Blair tackles millennium bug

The Baltimore Sun: Facing 2000 crisis ahead of schedule

December 27, 1997:

International Herald Tribune: Profits of Doom: Beating the Glitch of the Millennium

December 26, 1997:

Chicago Tribune: The clock is ticking...

CMP TechWeb: Israel Taps Arabs For High-Tech Skills

December 25, 1997:

BBC News: Mature skills to fight millennium bug

Wisconsin State Journal: Turmoil 2000: Computer Chaos Debate Rages On

USA Today: IRS must juggle many changes

The New Straits Times: DHL to spend RM97.5m fighting the Bug

December 24, 1997:

The Sacramento Bee: Lawmakers, legal firms gearing up for year 2000 glitches

Reuters: NYSE to decimalize after turn-of-century - Grasso

Washington Post: If Computer Geeks Desert, IRS Codes Will Be Ciphers: Agency Faces Taxing Conversion to 2000

Australian Financial Review: Millennium bug fears grow in Canberra

Australian Financial Review: Millennium bug is Asian time bomb

Financial Times: Christmas Eve: Santa logs on for a ride into the millennium (requires free registration)

December 23, 1997:

The Australian: Millennium report slams delays

Australian Financial Review: Race to beat the bug

December 22, 1997:

InformationWeek: Year 2000 Dictums

InfoWorld: Yamaha uses standardized storage solutions

InfoWorld: Year-2000 testing issues: Cure for the uncommon test

InfoWorld: Leading by example

InfoWorld: Hardware vendors are doing it too

InfoWorld: Year-2000 consultants don't hit the jackpot

InfoWorld: Year 2000 Dictums

InformationWeek: Year 2000 Cost Estimates Too Low, Reports Say -- Network, desktop costs hard to judge

InformationWeek: Chief of the Year Runner-Up

Internet Week: IT Managers Expect Few Y2K Problems

Computer Reseller News: Hiring boom raises stakes

Tribune Review: Officials plan to beat clock on 2000 computer glitch

Government Technology: Irish Businesses Not Equipped to Cope with Y2K Problems

The Detroit News: Social Security: GAO: Agency not ready for Year 2000 problem

Denver Business Journal: Taxpayers' 2000 cost at $100M: State, cities, counties look for computer fix

PA News: Acting Director appointed for Action 2000

Reuters: London Stock Exchange studies millennium bug risks

Australian Financial Review: Banks gear for 2000 problem

Australian Financial Review: Whiz-kids return for quick fix

Australian Financial Review: FAST FACTS: Millennium guide

Business Week: Lucent Turns Data Into A Visual Feast

Financial Times: Insurance: US insurers limit their losses (requires free registration)

December 21, 1997:

The Tampa Tribune: Consulting firms train people to fix year 2000 problem

Las Vegas Sun: IRS Faces Major Computer Projects
The Times of London: Millennium bug alarms Unilever

December 20, 1997:

San Jose Mercury News: Year 2000 bug could create real estate woes (requires free registration)

December 19, 1997:

Chicago Tribune: Party like it's 1999

San Francisco Examiner: Letter to the Editor #2: Millennium mischief

Reuters: Millenium Woes Hit Irish Business

TechWeb News: Survey Says One In Five Companies Working On Y2K Fix

Svejk
(GL-15 applies: digiserve.com ;-)



To: C.K. Houston who wrote (825)1/3/1998 4:02:00 PM
From: Joseph E. McIsaac  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9818
 
<< P.S. Could you please post your Y2K banking site link. I misplaced it.
Thanks. >>

marketpartners.com Year 2000 Solutions for Banks

One of the interesting realities of our business is that we never do code remediation whatsoever -- and so far none of our customers have even brought up the subject. It's totally a risk management issue for small and mid-size banks. Code remediation is completely understood and manageable -- what's hard for banks is in getting an appropriate level of disclosure from vendors, investigating the status of loan recipients, testing, regulatory compliance, and other "external" risks.



To: C.K. Houston who wrote (825)1/4/1998 9:05:00 AM
From: C.K. Houston  Respond to of 9818
 
WHO IS ED YARDENI?
One of the most highly influential & respected economists in the world.

===============================================================
Dr. Yardeni is the Chief Economist and a Managing Director of Deutsche Morgan Grenfell (North America). Working from the firm's headquarters in New York City, he writes the Weekly Economic Analysis, Weekly Economic Briefing, and Y2K Reporter, as well as a variety of topical studies. In these publications, Dr. Yardeni explores issues and trends in the economy and financial markets that are vital to a broad spectrum of decision-makers.

Dr. Yardeni previously served as Chief Economist for C.J. Lawrence, Prudential Securities, and E.F. Hutton. He taught at Columbia University's Graduate School of Business, and was an economist with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. He also held positions at the Federal Reserve Board of Governors and the U.S. Treasury Department in Washington, D.C. Dr. Yardeni completed his Ph.D. dissertation under Professor James Tobin, a Nobel Laureate, at Yale University. Previously, he received from Yale a masters degree in international relations. He completed his undergraduate studies magna cum laude at Cornell University.

Dr. Yardeni has published articles in The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and Barron's. He writes monthly for Nikkei Financial Daily and Nikkei Business. He has appeared on numerous television and radio shows, including Wall Street Week and CNN's Moneyline.
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WSJ: Ed Yardeni beats 55 other economists predictions for 1997.....
He won by essentially predicting higher GDP growth and lower bond rates by the end of 1997 than any of the other 55 economists polled.

Eclectic Background WSJ, 1/2/1998, pages 2 and 40, first section
Mr. Yardeni, who earned a Ph.D in Economics from Yale, has studied a variety of subjects over the years, including chemistry and computer science. [Ed's dad was a programmer!]

His eclectic background, and education, are what led him, earlier than most economists, he says, to spot the powerful changes that technology and international trade would bring.

He is also more concerned than most economists about the "year-2000"
computer programming problem. "The problem will be a disruption of the
information flow," says Mr. Yardeni. Even if only 10% of the worlds computers are not synchronized to register the year 2000, many computer systems will automatically shut down if they cannot communicate with other systems, he says. That would result in a range of problems, from airlines canceling flights to to companies not being able to automatically send bills, a situation that could retard
economic growth.

Although he doesn't believe that massive problems will result, Mr. Yardeni still puts the chance for a world-wide recession at 40% in the year 2000 from the dating problem. "We're talking about a global computer network that has been patched together over the past 40 years", he says. All the money in the world is not going to push back the deadline."
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"In fact, in Yardeni's eyes, the risks are so large that the chances for a Y2K-induced recession in the Year 2000 were a whopping 100%."
News article: y2ktimebomb.com
Full testimony: techstocks.com
Tony Keyes & Ed Yardeni both spoke in front of different Senate Subcommittees Nov 4. They know each other pretty well.
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Even if all the software all around the world is repaired in time, we also need to replace "embedded systems" that might not work on January 1, 2000. These are microprocessor devices that are used to control the operation of equipment, machinery, or production lines. They can be found in telephone systems, fire control systems, heating and ventilating systems, elevators, security systems, bank vaults, water and sewage systems, power stations, automated factories, airplanes, trains, buses, cars, air traffic control systems, radar systems, traffic lights, telephone switches, and satellites. They are EVERYWHERE!
Above quote is from a paper Ed Yardeni wrote in July, 1997.
yardeni.com
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ED YARDENI
E-mail: yardeni@ix.netcom.com
Web site: yardeni.com

CK HOUSTON'S FAVORITE YARDENI LINK:
Center for Cypereconomics: yardeni.com
Y2K Reporter: yardeni.com
Each time a new "issue" comes out, I print it and include it in my "Y2K Reporter" book. This & Ed's biography (above) is a good way to convince others about the seriousness of Y2K.

Yardeni Testimony Subcommittee on Financial Services & Technology 11/4/97
senate.gov
Emphasis on Infrastructure & Embedded System problems.