Subject: Year 2000 problem
William Real <realw [at] ix__netcom__com> writes >My institution has just asked me to develop contingency plans for >the possibility of systems malfunctions caused by the Y2K bug. Both >the security and HVAC controls systems have been cited as possible >victims. Add to that sprinkler systems that are (sometimes) wired directly into the plant alarm system. The same would probably go for dataloggers and anything they're talking with. I'd also want to look hard at things like cold storage rooms and vacuum chambers. Fortunately, there's a relatively simple way to eliminate some of your devices from the list of possible nasties. Generally (I can't swear to "always") devices with embedded PLCs (Programmable Logic Controllers) that might be subject to Y2K problems, must have some mechanism for setting the date for the device. If they don't then even, the reasoning goes, the device can't be doing anything with the real date, (i.e. all it can do is measure simple duration and chances are very slim that the century will come into play.) Of course the trick is figuring out whether there is actually some non-obvious mechanism for setting the date (like reprogramming an EPROM or executing some arcane FORTH program written in the mid 1970's). Walter *** Conservation DistList Instance 12:37 Distributed: Friday, October 16, 1998 Message Id: cdl-12-37-009 ***Received on Friday, 16 October, 1998