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Technology Stocks : COMS & the Ghost of USRX w/ other STUFF -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bill Ulrich who wrote (15502)5/18/1998 8:04:00 PM
From: David Lawrence  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22053
 
>>No thanks" on the email though

Yes, I understand that your are ".exe challenged". My sympathies. <g>



To: Bill Ulrich who wrote (15502)5/19/1998 11:01:00 AM
From: Moonray  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 22053
 
Year 2000 bug threatens phone service
Usa Today - Posted at 10:18 p.m. PDT Monday, May 18, 1998

NEW YORK -- Make a phone call on Jan. 1, 2000, and there's a good
chance that the call won't go through.

There's a 50 percent to 60 percent chance each major carrier will
suffer at least one failure of a mission critical system, said Lou
Marcoccio, a research director with The Gartner Group. And that's
despite the industry spending more than two years and billions of dollars
to rid their systems of Year 2000 bugs.

The telecommunications industry trails banks and insurers in fixing
Year 2000 problems, making some network trouble inevitable as the
millennium nears, experts warn.

Small, midsize and foreign-based carriers will be affected most. France,
Germany, Japan as well as many countries in southeast Asia, central
Africa and Latin America have spent less time and resources to fix the
problem.

U.S. fire and police department dispatch systems are vulnerable, too,
the Federal Communications Commission said. So are many older
corporate switchboards, owned and operated by telephone users, not
telephone companies.

At the heart of the problem are software programs that must be
rewritten to differentiate the year 1900 from 2000.

Telephone networks are computerized at every level, from the
transmission of calls to billing and ordering of supplies. Programs
throughout the system must be fixed. Every piece of problem
equipment must be identified, given a priority, fixed and tested.

Failures could range from billing problems to a complete lack of phone
service. It's impossible to say how widespread they will be or how long
they will last, Marcoccio said.

But ''no one is putting telecommunications companies under the
microscope the way bankers are examined,'' said David Baker, a
technology analyst at Schwab Washington Research Group. The FCC
can't impose a solution but it has sent letters to hundreds of companies
calling for action. FCC Commissioner Michael Powell said ''the vast
majority of police and fire equipment is not Year 2000 compliant.''

Gartner said big U.S. carriers are spending $70 million to $400 million
each to fix their Year 2000 problem. AT&T, the largest, expects to
spend $463 million on the problem in 1997 and 1998. It has hundreds of
people working on the problem full time, said AT&T's John Pasqua.

SBC Communications Group is spending $250 million to fix its Year
2000 problem.

The potential legal liabilities are huge. ''If some of these systems go
down, you are going to have a lot of cases,'' said Steven Brummel, a
partner with the Weil Gotshal & Manges office in Brussels, Belgium.

o~~~ O