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Technology Stocks : Year 2000 (Y2K) Embedded Systems & Infrastructure Problem -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: John Mansfield who wrote (487)7/5/1998 10:13:00 AM
From: John Mansfield  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 618
 
SECTION: LAW OFFICE TECH ; web; Pg.

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How extensive is the Y2K problem? It is probably safe to say that know one knows for sure. Consider this list of things that will be effected and you begin to see the magnitude of the Year 2000 problem (from T.R. Halverson's Painting the Golden Gate Bridge): Basic services and utilities: Water and sewage systems, electric power stations, power grids systems, emergency monitoring and alert systems, flood and disaster control systems, water disposal, natural gas delivery/metering. Communications: PBX and switching telephone systems, cable television systems, telephone systems, communication and entertainment satellites. Items in the home: telephones, cell phones, thermostat controls, televisions, microwave ovens, certain wristwatches, personal computers, fax machine, answering machine or voice mail, VCR, security system, automated lighting, landscaping, etc., systems, cable television service. Building systems: Backup lighting and generators, fire controls systems, environmental safety systems, heating & ventilation systems, programmable thermostats, lifts, elevators, escalators, security cameras, security systems (including badge readers, gates, etc., ) safes and vaults, door locks, vending machines. Banking and finance: ATMs, credit card systems. Health: Hospital monitoring equipment, defibrillators, pacemakers, backup systems. Transportation: Airplanes, trains, buses, marine craft, automobiles, air traffic control systems, Global Positioning Systems, signaling systems (e.g. railroad switching), radar systems, traffic lights and controllers, street lights, ticketing systems / machines, reservation and scheduling systems, car parking and other meters. Manufacturing and process controls: Manufacturing plants, oil refineries and related storage facilities, bottling plants, automated factories, weight scales, conveyors, emissions monitoring. Hazardous waste removal and disposal systems: Hazardous waste and pollution monitoring/control systems. Embedded dates: Invoice numbers, parts of policy numbers, license numbers, merchandise sales tags, storage bins tags, transaction numbers and date stamps, transaction tracing and backup recovery, blood donations, prescriptions, medical records. Computer hardware: Timers, system clocks and operating systems. Software: System software and applications software

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To: John Mansfield who wrote (487)7/5/1998 10:30:00 AM
From: John Mansfield  Respond to of 618
 
'asked in the Electric Utilities and Y2K Q&A Forum
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As a worker at a nuclear plant I am aware of the potential problems that we are being faced with now and in the future. If we start losing the Nukes because of Y2K noncompliance as a result of N.R.C. directives...can we reasonably expect martial law to soon follow ? If it does ..what will that mean to the average nuclear plant worker ? It seems to me that if the plants are taken off line that they will be required to unload fuel..a time consuming process. What about the plants , such as ours that have a very limited storage space for fuel rods? We are already using temporary storage casks for them, Im not sure that we have enough on site to unload 2 800+ megawatt reactors.
Asked by Bob Bailey (bbailey@cei.net) on July 02, 1998.

greenspun.com