Here's an article I found on another site. Human error will start to play more of a role in Y2K testing as evidenced by this new's piece. Hey Cheeks, good news... The tests on the trading floor went smooth. Can I print a balanced piece or what.<vbg> Please don't blame me for spelling errors or any typo's. I just did the o'l cut'n paste.
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Y2K - Nuclear Power Plant Compliance Test Goes 'Drastically Awry' By Rajiv Chandrasekaran Washington Post Staff Writer 3-7-99 PEACH BOTTOM, Pa. - In a sterile room filled with rows of hulking 1960s-era mainframes, complete with panels of blinking red and green lights, a half-dozen technicians at the massive nuclear power plant here set out early last month to test whether one of the facility's critical computer units would understand the year 2000.
It was supposed to be a prosaic affair. The unit in question had been pored over by programmers, it had been analyzed for a week in a simulator, and it was being hooked up to a backup version of the facility's central operations monitoring system. But when the computer's clock was turned ahead to Jan.1, 2000, something went drastically awry at the Peach Bottom Atomic Power Station. In what experts say was one of the more serious computer glitches in recent memory at a nuclear plant, the facility's primary and backup operations monitoring systems--which provide control-room technicians with vital data about temperature, pressure and water levels in the reactor's core--crashed. Every computer screen in the plant's control room blacked out and froze, forcing technicians to rely on antiquated gauges. Plant managers say the incident posed no risk to the public, but they nevertheless began planning to shut down the facility, which supplies electricity to the Philadelphia area. They eventually scotched those efforts after the computer specialists determined the source of the problem--a technician had improperly set the test clock--and restored the systems seven hours later. Although the cause was human error, technology specialists say the glitch here illustrates an unanticipated peril of the Year 2000 problem: As computer systems that have been repaired are now being tested in live conditions, inadvertent mistakes and undiscovered bugs can bring the machines--and the organizations that rely on them--to a grinding halt. "When you perform tests, you inevitably create some errors," said John C. Ballock, a Year 2000 manager for Computer Sciences Corp. With intensive Year 2000 testing taking place at almost every business and government agency around the world, such glitches are "something that we're definitely going to see more of," he said.
In Missouri, for instance, about 50,000 residential customers of the Metropolitan St. Louis Sewer District received incorrect bills last month--each was charged for consuming exactly 800 cubic feet of water in January--after a programmer failed to remove Year 2000 test data from a billing system. In Texas, 2,013 customers of Bank One Texas received erroneous notices in December saying they had bounced checks after an employee accidentally mailed out overdraft notices that had been printed for a date-related test.
And in Illinois, the village of Oswego got a monthly electric bill late last year for $7 million--about $6,989,000 more than the town normally is charged each month--because of software "bugs" in a new computer system purchased by Commonwealth Edison Co. to address the Year 2000 issue. The Year 2000 problem--dubbed Y2K--stems from the fact that millions of electronic devices, from mainframe computers that process payroll checks to heart monitors in hospital intensive-care units, were programmed to recognize only the last two digits of a year and to assume that the first two would be 1 and 9. When Jan. 1, 2000, arrives, unrepaired machines will understand the year "00" not as 2000 but 1900, potentially causing them to shut down or stop working properly. Despite the glitches that have been cropping up, technology analysts say testing is a critical part of the repair effort. It makes sense, they say, to discover bugs and to deal with any instances of human error now instead of later this fall or on Jan. 1. "The fact that people are having problems now is a good thing because it at least shows they're testing," said James Woodward, a senior vice president at Cap Gemini America, an information technology firm that provides date-related repair services. To that end, 400 U.S. banks, brokerage firms and stock exchanges embarked yesterday on the first stage of a seven-week program to test their ability to trade stocks and other securities in the new millennium. The test is being closely watched by technology analysts because the securities industry has long been viewed as a leader in addressing the Y2K issue and any problem could presage difficulties in other sectors of the economy. On Merrill Lynch & Co.'s football field-sized trading floor in New York, a dozen traders spent the morning pretending it was Dec. 29 and conducting about 500 simulated transactions. For trader Jason Horowitz, 29, the drill involved buying 1,000 shares of Costco Wholesale Corp. at $71.75 apiece from fellow securities firm Lehman Brothers. Working from an elaborate script that specified just how many shares of what to buy from whom at which price, Horowitz banged away at his computer terminal, quickly entering abbreviations for the required information. A few seconds later, the magic words appeared in blue text on his screen: "Transaction Confirmed." "This feels just like any other day, except that I'd probably be wearing a tie," said a casually dressed Horowitz, as he entered orders to sell 1,000 shares of 3Com Corp. and buy 1,100 shares of Intel Corp. All told, he executed 13 trades and received similar confirmation notices. "Everything seems to be going fine," he said. Merrill executives and industry officials generally concurred with that assessment, although they said they would not have detailed results until an auditing firm analyzes the trading data next month. "There probably will be some problems that come out of these tests for some of the smaller firms that haven't spent as much time fixing their systems," said Arthur L. Thomas, a Merrill senior vice president who is overseeing the testing efforts. "But we're expecting them to be minor and isolated." The securities firms decided to begin their tests by simulating Dec. 29 because transactions executed that day will be settled on Jan. 3, the first day of trading in the new year. The tests will continue on Saturdays until April 24. All told, the industry plans to conduct about 170,000 mock trades. Other industry groups have conducted--or are plbarked yesterday on the first stage of a seven-week program to test their ability to trade stocks and other securities in the new millennium. The test is being closely watched by technology analysts because the securities industryry has long been viewed as a leader in addressing the Y2K issue and any problem could presage dithe group reported. "We remain confident that dial tone will be available on January 1st," said Gene Chiappetta, the forum's chairman. The North America Electric Reliability Council plans to conduct an industry-wide test next month that will simulate a partial loss of computer systems and another in September that will simulate the rollover from Dec. 31 to Jan. 1. Some industry consultants have expressed worries that conducting broad tests late in the year will give companies little time to fix the problems they uncover, but they say they are encouraged by the pace of individual efforts in places like Peach Bottom. "It's good that these problems are happening now," said David Lochbaum, a nuclear safety engineer with the Union of Concerned Scientists. "You don't want this to occur on Dec. 31." At Peach Bottom, the problem began just after lunch on Feb. 8, when a group of technicians tested a computer called the "Rodworth Minimizer." The unit, which operates when the reactor is at low power, analyzes the position of "control rods" in the core and tells engineers which ones can--and cannot--be removed to balance power distribution. To simulate Jan. 1, the technicians had intended to connect the Rodworth to another computer that would serve as a clock. But instead of connecting the unit to the external clock, a programmer inadvertently reset the date on the backup and primary operations monitoring systems, which are not yet Y2K compliant, said Joseph Clepp, an information systems manager at Peco Energy Co., the Philadelphia-based utility that runs Peach Bottom.
As soon as the date was reset, the screens in the control room went blank. "There was no panic, but there was a lot of concern," said Jim Kovalchick, a shift supervisor who was in the control room during the outage. "We don't like unusual things, and here we had the high sensitivity of a system going down." After a discussion in which "we tried our best to be thoughtful about the situation we were in," Clepp's team decided to restore the operations system in a piecemeal fashion, testing each part as they went along. "We didn't want to bring up the system only to have it crash again," he said. The whole task took seven hours. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission, which said the Peach Bottom incident was the first Y2K problem at a nuclear plant, appeared sympathetic to Clepp's travails. "With computer software, it's hard to anticipate all the difficulties you can run into," said Jared S. Wermiel, chief of the NRC's reactor systems branch. "And too often, it's what you haven't thought of that comes back to bite you."
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