Daylight-saving time: When clocks spring forward this year, will IT fall down?
Circle March 11 on your calendar
February 1, 2007 12:00 PM ETComputerworld - With echoes of the Y2k scare of seven years ago, IT administrators in the U.S. face changes to daylight-saving time (DST) this year, prompting concerns about a potential IT crisis that must be recognized and resolved quickly.
Signed into law in August 2005, the federal Energy Policy Act of 2005 moved the start of DST from the the first Sunday in April to the second Sunday in March and delayed the return of standard time in the autumn by a week, to the first Sunday in November. The idea: Shifting the time change by a few weeks can save on energy use.
For IT, that means every software and hardware system relying on time stamps should now be checked, evaluated and tested -- and, if need be, patched with software updates or modified to work properly. But with a wide range of security issues, compliance requirements, spam-fighting efforts and other concerns already on their to-do lists, many IT administrators are only now evaluating what the DST change will mean and how they need to respond.
Gartner Inc. issued a statement today urging companies to take the issue seriously, saying "disruptions at an IT infrastructure and application level are likely" and "will have significant implications for organizations around the world." The Stamford, Conn.-based research firm said interruptions could affect calendaring applications, billing software and security programs as well as travel and trading schedules.
"This is a minor problem compared to the big code changes required in the recent past for issues like Y2k or the euro conversion," said Will Cappelli, an analyst at Gartner. "However, significant business damage and liabilities, as well as nuisance, could occur from applications performing their processing at the incorrect time if organizations do nothing."
In the meantime, the clock is ticking.
Complicating the effort is the fact that not all vendors have said whether and how their software and hardware might be affected. That's been one of the challenges for Rudy Ebisch, the assistant director of the infrastructure group at a large global manufacturer of home and office products, who asked that his company not be named.
With nine major software platforms to deal with, Ebisch and his staff have been working for about a month to determine what they need to do to prepare for DST. During their investigation, they found that more than 100 older, unsupported applications are based on the Java Runtime Environment (JRE), which has to be patched to properly reflect the time changes.
"There are a thousand things that are going to fall through the cracks," Ebisch said. "Everything is running JRE. It's pervasive. Who is going to look at all of that and figure out what needs to be patched?" There was stuff we knew we had to check [for JRE use], but now there's a hundred other things we have to check."
Daylight Saving Time
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