Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byCooper Holaday Modified over 10 years ago
1
1
2
Software in our lives, then and now Medical (processing and analysis, Computer Aided Surgery, other various equipment) Financial and business (banking, trading) Transportation (trains, cars, planes, auto-pilot) Home (security / fire) Leisure Military 2 I think there is a world market for maybe five computers. - IBM Chairman Thomas Watson, 1943
3
Murphy’s law “Anything that can go wrong, will go wrong.” 3
4
Previously in CS 577 Mars 2 Rover crash-landing (1971) dust storm caused incorrect landing angle computations? Ariane 5 self-destruct (1996) Data conversion from 64-bit floating point to 16-bit signed integer: overflow Cost: $370,000,000 Therac-25 Beta radiation overdose (10,000%) Replacing hardware interlocks with software interlock mechanisms Frequent overflow in a one-byte counter. Operator input to the machine during overflow causes interlock mechanism to fail due to race condition 3 deaths, 3 injured Unrealistic risk assessment, inadequate testing AMR / Budget Rent-A-Car / Hilton Hotels / Marriott International “Confirm” Bank of America “MasterNet” 4
5
Disasters at the people (not company) level Panama Radiation Therapy Overdose (2000) 18 deaths, 10 injured Double counting, Overreliance on automation Various military vehicle crashes Chinook Helicopter Crash, 29 deaths (1994): uncommanded run up and run down of the engines (analysis shows 486 anomalies in 18% of the code) V-22 Osprey Crash, 4 deaths (2000): software causes aircraft to decelerate when pilot attempts to reset software Failed missile interception, 28 deaths, 94 injured (1991): system clock Y2K (2000) Abbreviating year with 2 digits $300,000,000,000 cost 5
6
Toyota Anti-Lock Brake recalls (2010) ~150,000 vehicles recalled Reason: 1 second lag 60 mph (96.5 km/h) ~90 feet (27.5m) Enough to cause accidents Bad PR $1.1 billion in repairs $770-880 million in lost sales Endangering people’s lives 6 Toyota "Moving forward"... even when you don't want to.
7
Stock Market Flash Crash (2010) Dow Jones stock market (very closely watched U.S. benchmark indices tracking targeted stock market activity). Biggest on-day market decline, 998.5 points Cost: $1,000,000,000,000 Procter & Gamble, Accenture: shares price down to a penny, or up to $100,000. Recovered a large amount of the point drop 7
8
Cold War Nuclear Missile False Alarm Very sensitive period Strategy was an immediate nuclear counter-attack to guarantee “ Mutually Assured Destruction” How it was mitigated: soldier considered it was a computer error The bug: false alarm created by a rare alignment of sunlight on high-altitude clouds and the satellites’ orbits. Cost: Nuclear World War 3 8
9
What’s next? Just as Thomas Watson couldn’t guess what was coming up in the next 40 years, it is pretty hard for us to estimate how computers and technology will evolve in the near future. However, we know for sure that software systems will get MUCH larger and complex, more tasks will be automated, reliance on software will greatly increase. 9
10
Do more testing? Testing will only catch ~80% of the bugs. “Program testing can be used to show the presence of bugs, but never to show their absence!” Edsger Dijkstra 10
11
Conclusion: our role Our responsibility increases as the need for reliability in our system increases Proper process / practices in architecting, managing risks, developing and testing. As we were taught in various SE classes (577, 578…) Good communication between stakeholders To ensure all sides are talking about the same thing 11
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.