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To: tech who wrote (2247)1/27/1998 11:13:00 AM
From: tech  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3391
 
Smith Barney Deposits $19 Million into Each Client's Account ________(news)


Link: survivey2k.com


Smith Barney's programmers were attempting to work on y2k. When
they ran a test of their repair, their "new, improved" program deposited
$19 million into each of the firm's half a million clients.

Oops!

Now, multiply this by hundreds of thousands of companies.

This appears on Jim Lord's Web site.

* * * * * * *

Here is an instructive Y2K story. The item was carried on CNN on June
5, 1997 and involves Smith Barney, the well-known stock brokerage and
investment banking firm (two legs of the "three legged stool I mentioned
earlier).

"A computer glitch at Smith Barney overnight briefly put $19 million into
each of hundreds of thousands of customer accounts, the brokerage said
Thursday morning. ...Smith Barney spokesman Gordon Andrew said
customers were not affected in any way. At some point overnight, he
said, roughly $19 million appeared in separate entries for each Smith
Barney financial management account. The brokerage has 525,000 such
accounts."

Now, as Paul Harvey would say, "Here's the rest of the story." The
computer programmers who fouled this one up were attempting to make
Y2K repairs to a database. The changes had been successfully tested
off-line, so the crew decided to conduct a live test in conjunction with
the firm's main software. The result of the test was an accidental deposit
of $19,000,000 into each account. The total error exceeded ten trillion
dollars.