Y2K - 75% Of US Companies Have Already Had Failures

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Y2K - 75% Of US Companies Have Already Had Failures

By Thomas Hoffman

http://cnn.com/TECH/computing/9908/12/failurey2k.idg/ 8-14-99

(IDG) - First, the bad news: Three-quarters of U.S. companies have already experienced year 2000-related failures, according to an ongoing survey of information technology executives at 161 companies and government agencies.

The good news is that only 2 percent of those companies polled have actually suffered business disruptions because of those glitches, as they were able to either fix the problems quickly or enact workarounds, the survey found. Looking ahead, that could be a positive harbinger of what might occur early next year.

"The key is what will the volume [of problems] be and can they be fixed quickly," said Jim Woodward, senior vice president of Cap Gemini America Inc. in New York, which has been conducting the survey with Pound Ridge, N.Y.-based Rubin Systems Inc. since 1997.

Among the Y2K failures that have occurred, 92 percent involved financial miscalculations or losses, 84 percent caused processing disruptions, 38 percent led to customer service problems and 34 percent were supply-chain or logistics breakdowns.

Few of the failures have been visible because they haven't caused significant business disruptions, and companies "don't have a lot of reasons to make them public," Woodward said.

Still, the survey results highlight other concerns. Only 48 percent of the organizations polled expect to have all their mission-critical systems prepared, and 16 percent don't expect at least half of their most important systems to be ready.

-- Andy (2000EOD@prodigy.net), August 14, 1999

Answers

Andy...Hope you're right about problems being manageable, (possibly) but if 72% have had problems with look-ahead applications, what will happen when these apps. have to run in 'real time'( He asked, hoping no one will catch on to his lack of programming knowledge )

-- citizen (lost@sea.com), August 14, 1999.

Well citizen,

I don't believe the problems will be manageable at all. We will be swamped worldwide. Cascading failures, cross defaults in banking, imported data corrupting databases endemically - it won't be pretty. You are right, nothing beats a realtime test, and that REAL TIME is 4.5 months away...

-- Andy (2000EOD@prodigy.net), August 15, 1999.


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