SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Y2K (Year 2000) Stocks: An Investment Discussion -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Nanda who wrote (12395)7/16/1998 1:15:00 PM
From: JEFF CHAPMAN  Respond to of 13949
 
Very interesting story out of Japan (Asia Pulse)

(COMTEX) B: ANALYSIS - JAPAN DISQUIETINGLY QUIET ON YEAR 2000 PROBLEM
B: ANALYSIS - JAPAN DISQUIETINGLY QUIET ON YEAR 2000 PROBLEM

LOS ANGELES, July 16 (Asia Pulse via COMTEX) -- The drums are beating
loud worldwide about the Year 2000 Problem, except in Japan, where
there is an eerie silence on this potentially devastating computer
software glitch.

The new millennium is now some 500 days away. Japan's financial
industry is behind in the effort to fix their computer systems, and
while financial institutions are supposed to report on the progress
they are making, little information is forthcoming here. That has
experts in the U.S. and Europe very worried, imagining that, like with
Japanese banking system's bad loan problem, the situation is so severe
that nobody dares even talk about it.

Until the clock strikes, no one can be sure how bad the situation will
be when computers must deal with dates involving the year 2000. But
modern networked society is vulnerable to a chain reaction as computers
spread the damage among themselves. It could be a crisis situation
similar to the oil shocks of the 1970s and could trigger a global
recession.

The same information technology which created the "new economy" is now
putting a drag on the global economy. The worldwide cost of fixing
computer programs to deal with the Millennium Bug is estimated at
US$600 billion. The major corporations of Europe and the U.S. are
currently spending 30% of their information technology investments just
to protect against Y2K damage.

Meanwhile, there is also a severe shortage of programmers who can fix
all the programs that need to be fixed in time.

Most of these programs were written years ago in COBOL, an old computer
language in which the current generation of programmers is not fluent.
The U.S. alone is said to have a shortage of 70,000 engineers to deal
with domestic needs.

Over 200 claims have already been filed in the U.S., and the total cost
of reparations could exceed US$1 trillion.

The activity in the U.S. makes the silence in Japan all the more
isquieting. The problem must be huge, "but in Japan the topic is taboo,
" explained Nobuo Mii, an ex-vice president of IBM Corp., now living in
the U.S.

Part of the reason is that it is unclear who should take responsibility
for fixing all the programs. Japan's computer makers bundled in
software to promote their machines, so ownership of the programs is
vague, as is the question of who should shoulder the huge burden of
cost.

Another problem is that corporations have been slipshod about managing
the operation of their programs, often passing the job off to
subcontractors. Thus, managers are quick to assume "everything's OK"
even when they have no clue. "It's unfortunate, but the Americans do
not believe it when Japan says everything's OK," explained Mii.

But who can blame them? Tour operators kept saying everything was OK
right up to the day of the World Cup game in France, when many Japanese
travelers found they had no tickets to the match. One U.S. company
tested the programs of a leading Japanese electronics maker and
discovered a string of Millennium bugs. The Y2K problem is a global
problem, so Japan should not bury its bad news.

(Nikkei)

-0-

(C) 1998 Asia Pulse Pte Ltd

*** end of story ***

BTW, I got this story from mytrack.com's software which is free (for delayed quotes and real time news) and
can be downloaded here:
mytrack.com

If you do sign up for this (you get Comtex newswires around the clock
on markets around the world plus Marketguide reports for free, with
news/quotes/ticker in 'pushed' streaming format, contests and chat), level
II quotes for $20 this month, $30 thereafter (free sample for MSFT -
dynamic Level II this month)
Please put
'Muthavugah' in the referred by field...