Japan experiencing the most leap year problems; most countries reporting only minor glitches

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FROM the BBC: http://www.opec.com/world-news.html

Tuesday, 29 February, 2000, 14:40 GMT Leap year computer bug bites

Japan appears to have suffered alone so far

Japan has been worst hit by the Leap Year computer bug, a failure by computers to recognise the year 2000 as a leap year and add a day on 29 February.

Bug in Japan 1,200 cash dispensers in post offices fail 43 Meteorological Agency offices have computer failures Three prefectures have failures in seismic monitoring equipment Computer system monitoring work hours fails at Monju nuclear plant Six financial firms report problems Schedule boards at three railway stations fail 370 information display screens in post offices fail Cash machines, weather and earthquake prediction systems, and a nuclear plant were all affected and the government was forced to admit embarrassing carelessness.

Chief government spokesman Mikio Aoki said the government had let down its guard after the New Year, when the millennium bug caused a number of problems.

"Because everything went well then, there is no denying we were negligent this time," he said.

Elsewhere in the world, the problems were rare and minor. In New Zealand, as many as 4,000 shops had trouble verifying banking transactions and in Singapore the subway system rejected some travellers' cards this time," he said.

No glitches have yet been reported from Europe or the Americas. Computers in the US have did fail in leap years before. Four years ago, for instance, Arizona Lottery players could not buy tickets when machines failed. To leap or not to leap

The problem results from an exception to an exception in the rule determining which years are leap years and therefore have an extra day, 29 February.

Generally, leap years occur every four years, when the year is wholly divisible by four. However, years that are wholly divisible by 100 are not leap years. The confusion has arisen because not all programmers were aware that those years that are wholly divisible by 400 remain leap years, meaning 2000 is in fact a leap year.

The failures in Japan, one of the world's most technologically-advanced nations, are embarrassing. They follow high-profile space rocket failures, last year's nuclear accident and hacker attacks on government computers, as well as difficulties with the millennium bug at the start of 2000.

-- meg davis (meg9999@aol.com), February 29, 2000

Answers

(Meg, regarding a line in your article above that states: "In New Zealand, as many as 4,000 shops had trouble verifying banking transactions".....

According to the following, network operators say the glitch had little to do with Y2k. They didn't say it had "nothing" to do with Y2k!)

~~~

New Zealand news from The Press

Wednesday, March 01, 2000

NATIONAL BRIEFING

4000 eftpos terminals hit by Leap Year hiccup

Up to 4000 eftpos terminals may have been affected by a Leap Day computer glitch yesterday, but network operators insist it had little to do with Y2K problems.

Yesterday was the biggest Y2K test for computer systems since January 1, and the International Y2K Co-operation Centre reported problems with cash dispensing machines in Japan as well. New Zealand's Y2K Readiness Commission chairman, Basil Logan, said February 29 had always held the potential for problems because computers might think that it was the year 1900, which did not have a Leap Day. "A minor problem has been reported by the banking sector as a result of the changeover of computer systems to the 29th of February," he said. "The problem is not widespread and affects a few merchants using electronic banking transaction systems." http://www.press.c o.nz/2000/09/000301n22.htm

-- Lee Maloney (leemaloney@hotmail.com), February 29, 2000.


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