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To: Gerald Underwood who wrote (11771)2/19/1998 11:27:00 PM
From: Josef Svejk  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 31646
 
Humbly report, Gerald, seems to me that's one of the best I've read!

They get it:

[ . . . ]
Indeed, what makes Year 2000 particularly vexing is that it affects both
stand-alone computers and the embedded processors built into all sorts of
modern equipment, from automated factory equipment to power plants to cars
to cellular telephones. Last fall, Phillips Petroleum Co. engineers ran Year
2000 tests on an oil-and-gas production platform in the North Sea. The result:
In a simulation, an essential safety system for detecting harmful gases such
as hydrogen sulfide got confused and shut down. In real life, that would have
rendered the platform unusable. Similar problems can occur in almost any
sort of modern manufacturing that involves sensors and ''smart'' machinery.
''There will be facilities where they go in and turn on the machines and they
won't go on,'' says Dean Kothmann, head of the technology division at
engineering firm Black & Veatch, the world's largest provider of power plants.

In particular, electric utilities are only now becoming aware that
programmable controllers--which have replaced mechanical relays in
virtually all electricity-generating plants and control rooms--may behave
badly or even freeze up when 2000 arrives. Many utilities are just getting a
handle on the problem. ''It's probably six months too soon for anyone to try to
guess the complete extent of the problem,'' says Charlie Siebenthal, manager
of the Year 2000 program at the Electric Power Research Institute, the
industry group that serves as an information clearinghouse. ''We don't know''
if electricity flow will be affected, he said.

Nuclear power plants, of course, pose an especially worrisome problem. While
their basic safety systems should continue to work, other important systems
could malfunction because of the 2000 bug. In one Year 2000 test, notes Jared
S. Wermiel, who is leading the millennium bug effort at the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, the security computer at a nuclear power plant failed
by opening vital areas that are normally locked. For that reason, the NRC is in
the process of issuing a letter requesting confirmation from utilities that
their plants will operate safely come Jan. 1, 2000. Given the complexity and
the need to test, ''it wouldn't surprise me if certain plants find that they are
not Year 2000-ready and have to shut down,'' says Wermeil.

By contrast, the securities industry, big banks, and the Federal Reserve have
been taking Year 2000 seriously for years.
[ . . . ]

businessweek.com

Thanks!

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