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Technology Stocks : Y2K (Year 2000) Stocks: An Investment Discussion -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Jim Fitzgerald who wrote (13456)1/1/1999 7:31:00 PM
From: Secret_Agent_Man  Respond to of 13949
 
01/01/99- Updated 02:23 PM ET
The Nation's Homepage

Year 2000 bug hits some a year early

BOISE, Idaho - Thousands of people using outdated accounting
software in their homes or businesses run the risk of being bitten by
the Y2K bug a year earlier than expected.

Cougar Mountain Software Inc. of Boise rushed the newest version
of its Act Plus accounting program to Lynn Electric on Thursday
after the small Bluefield, W.Va., company tried to close its 1998
payroll.

It was using 4-year-old software unable to translate dates that
included the year 2000.

"All the documents reverted to 1944," Cougar Mountain spokesman
Dave Lakhani said. "They were unable to process their payroll and
had to order the update to correct the problem."

Even with the lost man hours, potentially lost data and the hassle of
trying again to close its books over the New Year's holiday
weekend, Lynn Electric got off cheap. The software upgrade cost
only $400.

But experts estimate larger businesses and those using customized
software could face $50,000 to $100,000 expenses.

Vincent Hamm, president of Aim High Inc., a computer consulting
firm in Golden, Colo., said he expects to hear similar tales of woe in
coming days as accounting software users open 1999 financial
calendars that typically extend 18 months - into 2000.

"This is the first one that I've heard, but it makes perfect sense," he
said. "Anytime that you've got something that's forward looking and
it crosses that threshold, you've got a potential problem."

The Y2K problem arose when programmers of early computers
represented each year by its last two digits rather than by all four -
for example, 1972 as 72 - mostly to save computer memory.

Trouble begins when computers try to add or subtract dates using
that two-digit format and the world approaches the year 2000, or 00.
The larger, older mainframe computers still used by government and
big corporations for many vital functions are particularly vulnerable.

Lakhani said Cougar Mountain started notifying all its customers
two years ago that certain software was not Y2K compliant, and
initially offered free upgrades. Additional warnings were issued at
least quarterly through the company's newsletter, Internet site and
direct mail, he said.

Like so many others, Lynn Electric President Lindon Taylor said he
did not expect it to be a problem until late 1999.

"That's what we were thinking, when it kicked over to 2000. We
didn't think about it happening this year," said Taylor, whose
company remanufactures electrical generators and motors.

The company shuts its doors on New Year's Eve each year, so
employees tried to close the annual payroll records and open a 1999
file on Wednesday. Taylor said he thought upgraded software
already had been installed.

"We had checked with our bank and our financial people as best we
could, and we thought we didn't have a problem. But we did."

Hamm said the first Y2K problems actually hit almost 14 months
ago when users of some newly issued credit cards found computers
would not recognize expiration dates in 2000, embossed as "00" on
the cards. He said it took the industry about five months to
completely clear up the difficulty.

As for why Lynn Electric's computers would revert to 1944, Hamm
said a number of personal computer programmers arbitrarily used
that year as the start date for operating system clocks. Some PCs
recognize no dates before 1944, he said, while most outdated
mainframe and other larger computers simply read a date with 00 as
1900 rather than 2000.

By The Associated Press



To: Jim Fitzgerald who wrote (13456)1/1/1999 10:45:00 PM
From: Starwalt  Respond to of 13949
 
Jim-
Go to the "Y2K (year 2000) Personal Contingency planning" thread and ask your question.
They know what's hot & what's not.
Post to "Flatsville" she is quite knowledgeable in this area, as are others on that thread.