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To: Gerald F Bunch who wrote (19947)7/5/1998 10:08:00 AM
From: John Mansfield  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 31646
 
' T WAS THE BIGGEST, BEST-ATTENDED year 2000 conference yet, but it still wasn't enough. "If everyone who should be working on the problem were here, we'd be in Yankee Stadium," said Leon Kappelman, co-chair of the Society for Information Management's (SIM) Y2K Working Group and the Y2K conference's chairman.
More than 1,500 people gathered in New York City in March for SPG's Year 2000 Conference and Expo
...

'At the same time, new facets of Y2K continue to emerge, like problems with embedded chips and PCs, IT's lack of experience with contingency planning and widespread concern about how governments and the utilities industry are handling their own Y2K issues.
...

'Embedded Systems Dangers
Two sessions directly addressed the issue of Y2K bugs etched into embedded systems, but questions about the risks they pose were sprinkled throughout the conference. In a three-hour workshop on the topic, David Hall, a senior consultant at Cara Corp. in Chicago, said that identifying all the embedded systems throughout an enterprise is difficult, and testing them for compliance is nearly impossible.
"There's been approximately $10 billion in microprocessors manufactured and sold since 1991," Hall said. "And only 10 percent of those have gone into PCs. Finding and fixing the other 90 percent is going to be a pretty big challenge."
Hall recommended that Y2K managers get test data from vendors and then rigorously verify it. Jay Abshier, Y2K manager at Texaco Inc. in Bellaire, Texas, supported that approach. He said that his company had received assurances from an embedded chip's manufacturer that it was compliant, but after Abshier's team performed an assessment of their systems, they found some systems didn't recognize Feb. 29, 2000, as a valid date. "Doing that kind of testing isn't cheap," Abshier said. "And it's something that has to be in your budget for 1999."
...

' T WAS THE BIGGEST, BEST-ATTENDED year 2000 conference yet, but it still wasn't enough. "If everyone who should be working on the problem were here, we'd be in Yankee Stadium," said Leon Kappelman, co-chair of the Society for Information Management's (SIM) Y2K Working Group and the Y2K conference's chairman.
More than 1,500 people gathered in New York City in March for SPG's Year 2000 Conference and Expo. The presenters included Kappelman, economist Ed Yardeni and tireless gong-banger Peter de Jager. Each one underscored Kappelman's comment: After more than a year of awareness-raising, too few companies and government agencies are paying enough attention to their Y2K problems.
At the same time, new facets of Y2K continue to emerge, like problems with embedded chips and PCs, IT's lack of experience with contingency planning and widespread concern about how governments and the utilities industry are handling their own Y2K issues.
For these reasons, there was a surreal mood to the conference. Attendees felt that the scope of their projects is expanding as the time frame to complete them is shrinking, and yet it seems that the rest of the world regards Y2K as either a low priority or a simple fix that's not of concern to nontechnical types. Yardeni, the Deutsche Morgan Grenfell economist who has speculated about the possibility of a global recession sparked by Y2K, captured the atmosphere best in his keynote: "I don't know about you, but [Y2K] has been an X Files experience for me. I can't tell if I'm being paranoid, or if the rest of the world is just oblivious. Should I be taking heavy doses of Prozac? Check into the Betty Ford Clinic for Delusional Economists?"
Yardeni's line got a laugh--but it was a very sympathetic one. This audience knew how he felt. It was not an optimistic group.

Embedded Systems Dangers
Two sessions directly addressed the issue of Y2K bugs etched into embedded systems, but questions about the risks they pose were sprinkled throughout the conference. In a three-hour workshop on the topic, David Hall, a senior consultant at Cara Corp. in Chicago, said that identifying all the embedded systems throughout an enterprise is difficult, and testing them for compliance is nearly impossible.
"There's been approximately $10 billion in microprocessors manufactured and sold since 1991," Hall said. "And only 10 percent of those have gone into PCs. Finding and fixing the other 90 percent is going to be a pretty big challenge."
Hall recommended that Y2K managers get test data from vendors and then rigorously verify it. Jay Abshier, Y2K manager at Texaco Inc. in Bellaire, Texas, supported that approach. He said that his company had received assurances from an embedded chip's manufacturer that it was compliant, but after Abshier's team performed an assessment of their systems, they found some systems didn't recognize Feb. 29, 2000, as a valid date. "Doing that kind of testing isn't cheap," Abshier said. "And it's something that has to be in your budget for 1999."
Separately, de Jager, in a keynote address, said that he is considering relinquishing responsibility for his Project Damocles effort. (He has since terminated the project altogether.) De Jager started the project late last year to attempt to bring more attention--and accountability--to the embedded systems issue. But now he's worried that by serving as a conduit for complaints about noncompliant embedded systems he'll be subpoenaed countless times in post-Y2K litigation. "Like everyone else here, I want to avoid the courtroom," he said.

PC Risks
Why haven't PCs been considered part of the Y2K equation? Speaker Karl W. Feilder, CEO and president of Greenwich Mean Time Inc. in Chichester, England, a provider of Y2K PC tools that researches the impact of Y2K on desktop systems, has a few theories. First, he says that few companies are selling tools to assess and fix Y2K problems on PCs relative to the number of vendors focusing on mainframes. Second, there's a psychological issue. "Most senior decision makers grew up with mainframes," Feilder says. "They think people don't do anything useful on a PC. And that's fundamentally wrong." Third, most IT organizations exercise less control over PCs than over other systems. "I spoke with a Baby Bell the other day that thought it had 50,000 PCs," Feilder says, nursing a cafE latte in the lobby bar of the New York Hilton. "They actually had 75,000."
Feilder pointed out that the Y2K problem on PCs doesn't end with the BIOS chip. "That's only 1 percent of the problem," he says. Feilder describes the PC problem as having five layers: hardware, operating systems, software programs, data and data sharing. He recommends addressing each of those layers the same way one would handle the Y2K project for a mainframe system: assessment, triage, conversion and testing.
And companies that allow employees to telecommute have to be concerned not only with PCs in the workplace but with PCs at home. Can organizations afford not to prepare those PCs for the new millennium? "You have to do it," says Feilder. "Otherwise, you wouldn't want to let them connect to your network. It could be seen as legally negligent."

Uncertainty About Utilities
One of the dominant worries at the conference was how the nation's power and telecommunications infrastructure will weather the transition from 1999 to 2000. While most companies take electricity and telecom service for granted, several presenters brought up troubling examples of how even isolated failures can wreak havoc on the business world. Among the anecdotes were discussions of last winter's ice storm in Canada and northern New England, as well as the lengthy power outage in Auckland, New Zealand.
"In my opinion, there is a 100 percent certainty that we will see blackouts as a result of Y2K if current trends continue," said Hall. "How long and how large will they be? I don't know." Hall, a member of the SIM Working Group, also pointed out that power plants of all types are highly dependent on security and safety infrastructures that could fail. "If the local 911 system doesn't work, a nuclear plant can't operate," he observed, noting that regulations require that staff be able to summon firetrucks and ambulances in an emergency.
...

cio.com



To: Gerald F Bunch who wrote (19947)7/5/1998 10:11:00 AM
From: WR  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 31646
 
The Options Clearing Corp.:
Embedded system land mines

Having invested more than a decade of time in remediation efforts to counteract the millennium bug, Len Neuzil is one of the few IT executives who should feel confident that all systems are go for the year 2000.

But he's not, mostly because there are so many things that are out of his control: specifically, the embedded chips that reside within mainframes, servers, power grids and telephone circuit switches, to name a few.

These embedded microprocessors, Neuzil would argue, are the real ticking time bombs, not the software programs. "The embedded chips are made from different manufacturers around the world," says Neuzil, senior vice president of the Production Systems Division at The Options Clearing Corp., in Chicago. "We don't know where they are coming from, and we can't look at the code on the chip."

As a result, the first shot of even knowing where these microchip land mines lie in an organization will come on Jan. 1, 2000. Therefore, OCC has lined up two disaster recovery sites, the company is accepting power feeds from two separate grids, and it is buying digital cell phones that double as walkie-talkies.

Neuzil is also talking to the building management where his office resides to inquire about the readiness of elevators and escalators. After all, Neuzil's office is on the 24th floor.

Y2K stats: The Options Clearing Corp.

Staff dedicated to Y2K: 15 programmers

Lines of code to be translated: 2.1 million

Deadline for completion: The Options Clearing Corp. started the conversion process in 1985, and, as of 1996, the company has been Y2K-compliant. Despite the fact the company has invested more than a decade on conversions, the Y2K team will continue testing well into the year 2000.

Special issues: As the clearinghouse for the American Stock Exchange, the Chicago Board Option Exchange, the Pacific Stock Exchange and the Philadelphia Stock Exchange, OCC has a daily liability of $30 billion. Therefore, it can allow no downtime whatsoever. As a result, OCC is looking beyond the issue of Y2K software compliance to focus Y2K efforts on the embedded chips residing in the company's servers and mainframes. In addition, OCC has contacted the power company, the telephone company and the building management of its Chicago office to make sure communication is not cut off, electricity is on and elevators are operating after the date roll.

These initiatives may seem extreme, but OCC has about 150 customers in the form of clearing member companies and stockbrokers that rely on the company's ability to conduct daily trades. OCC is a clearinghouse for the American Stock Exchange, the Pacific Stock Exchange, the Philadelphia Stock Exchange and the Chicago Board Option Exchange. One day down would be a $30 billion liability for OCC, Neuzil says.

Obviously, the stakes are high, and Neuzil is not taking any chances. If the OCC data center were to lose power, the company's mainframe and its Sun Microsystems Inc. Solaris servers can draw power from a second power feed that could in fact originate in a different state. If that power supply were to fail, operations could switch over to the disaster recovery site in North Bergin, N.J., which is run by Comdisco Inc.

The Comdisco site is a replica of the Chicago data center, running operations in parallel. In addition, OCC has contracted four diesel generators from Comdisco to power the data center in case there is no electricity in New Jersey. To triple his efforts, Neuzil has had Comdisco build a second site in Wood Dale, Ill.

At this point, the plan seems solid. But there is also the issue of communication. If the phone lines go down because the telephone company experiences a Y2K glitch, there is a good possibility that the leased lines and cellular phones will be out of commission as well, Neuzil says. Therefore, he has purchased a few dozen phones from Nextel Communications Inc. that are cellular but double as walkie-talkies, allowing communication within a 31-mile radius.

Neuzil is passionate about protecting OCC and the financial community as a whole. Therefore, OCC representatives sit on five subcommittees formed by the Securities Industry Association, which this month will conduct an industry Y2K beta test with 18 participating companies. Next March, the entire securities industry will be included in the tests.

Despite Neuzil's efforts and the industrywide testing, it still may not be enough to protect the financial community from a sudden Y2K explosion of some sort. "Even if we are ready and we do everything perfectly, if one major exchange or big clearing member [has a problem], it will affect us all," Neuzil says. "And even if that works, but something happens in the Pacific Rim or the [United Kingdom], it could affect our market."

Neuzil is realistic: "No matter how good a job all of us do," he says, "we won't catch it all."

zdnet.com