Computerworld
Quick Menu
Search



Ads by TechWords

See your link here


Subscribe to our e-mail newsletters
For more info on a specific newsletter, click the title. Details will be displayed in a new window.
IT Management
Computerworld Daily News (First Look and Wrap-Up)
Computerworld Blogs Newsletter
The Weekly Top 10
More E-Mail Newsletters 
Computerworld 2007Subscribe to Computerworld
40 years of the most authoritative source of news and information for IT leaders.

Nasdaq Under Fire For Neglecting IT

In latest glitch, exchange rejected messages; Nasdaq blames members' systems for woes
 

Sign up to receive Management Resource Alerts

May 29, 2000 (Computerworld) -- A major electronic communications network, Instinet, said its customers were hobbled for an hour last week due to technical glitches in Nasdaq's trading system.
Instinet Corp., a subsidiary of Reuters Group PLC, said a significant portion of its data messages to Nasdaq Stock Market Inc.'s gateway were rejected by the exchange. For about an hour last Tuesday morning, bids for Nasdaq stocks made through Instinet weren't visible to traders.
This wasn't an isolated incident, charged Michael Galano, senior vice president and head of U.S. equities at Instinet. The Nasdaq computer system has been repeatedly plagued by similar glitches, slowdowns and other problems.
But Scott Peterson, a Nasdaq spokesman, said last Tuesday's glitch was an isolated event: There was a bug in a software update that affected a handful of firms. As a temporary solution, those firms reverted to the previous version of the software.
Since then, he said, the problem has been fixed.
However, Nasdaq has come under fire from everyone from Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Arthur Levitt to one of its own board members.
"There is too much focus on marketing, on sponsoring the Super Bowl, on public relations, on the $37 million sign in Times Square," said board member Alan Davidson, president of Smithtown, N.Y.-based Zeus Securities Inc., head of the Independent Broker-Dealer Association and a critic of recent Nasdaq strategy.
The Instinet problem is only the latest example of its lack of focus on domestic technology issues, he said.
Not so, said Peterson. In January, Nasdaq upgraded from a single switch to a multiswitch link for SelectNet, the computer system that distributes market information to traders. And since then, system delays, if any, have been less than a second long, he said.
If any delays are being experienced, he said, the fault is with the member firms' computers. "Some of them have been using workstations operating at 200 MHz," he said, adding that Nasdaq's minimum standard is 750 MHz. "We are in the process of assisting those firms in upgrading their technology."
Meanwhile, the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) may postpone its plan to go public in order to focus on the conversion to decimal-based trading from fraction-based.
Richard Grasso, chairman of NYSE, told reporters last week that although the NYSE could have gone public as early as late last year, it won't do so until the second half of 2001, at the earliest.




Print this Story Send Us Feedback E-mail this Story Digg! Digg this Story Slashdot this Story
"It's easy to set up or buy your own Linux desktop, but it's much harder to set up hundreds of..." Read more...
"IT pilot fish at a rural hospital gets a call out of nowhere from a big medical equipment supplier, who..." Read more...
Read more Management posts or See all Blogs
Windows users indifferent to Microsoft patch alarm, says researcher
Tech jobs down sharply but not out
Apple yanks antivirus advice from its Web site
More top stories...
Microsoft slates 8 bug updates for year's final Patch Tuesday
De Beers tries to force spoof news Web site offline over fake ad
Microsoft confirms Yahoo's Lu to run online services
Thin as ever, the latest Air offers up to twice the storage and snappy performance.
We've got an array of economical, expensive, and just plain weird tech gifts for your friends and family.
The spam-spewing 'Srizbi' botnet that was shut down two weeks ago has been resurrected and is again under criminal control, say security researchers.
Facebook is popular and growing -- especially with criminals. Here's why they love it.
Get the latest news, reviews and more about Microsoft's newest desktop operating system
Find wage data for 50 IT job titles.
All Zones
Business Continuity Zone
The File Data Management Zone
Security Management Zone
The SAS Zone
Business Intelligence and Analytics Zone
The Enterprise Search Zone
Software as a Service Zone
The Security Zone

Ads by TechWords

See your link here
Turning information into a Competitive Advantage
Turning information into a Competitive Advantage
View this webcast now!
Go to the webcast 
SaaS Solutions for Remote Systems Management
Download this Technology Briefing, free, compliments of Dell.
(Source: Dell) Software as a Service (SaaS) solutions are extending their reach into systems management. Beyond the traditional advantages of cost control and rapid application deployment, SaaS helps organizations meet compliance, security, and business continuity needs. Learn more in this new technology briefing.
Download this executive briefing download
The Importance of Application Management
Get this white paper now!
(Source: Dell) Efficient desktop application management is essential in normal day-to-day operations of any company. Whether you are introducing a new application or implementing an OS migration, the goal is the same: minimize disruptions and ensure user productivity throughout the process.
Download this white paper go
White Papers
Read up on the latest ideas and technologies from companies that sell hardware, software and services.
8 Things You Need to Handle Today's Network Traffic
Next-Gen Load Balancing: 3 Keys to Successful Delivery of Advanced Web Apps
Building a Reliable and Dynamic Data Center with PAN Manager by Egenera
View more whitepapers