We knew that the problem was already solved, but the media kept leaning into the sensational doomerism. That was the first time in my life that I realized that the media might not be unbiased or truthful.
It was probably just Trump supporters. Those guys eat all the gloom and doom stuff up because they actually really hope the world's going to end, as it's the only way they'll ever end up on top.
December 31st 1999, I was at a house party in Lexington, KY. We had a few radio stations playing for ambiance. Once we realized that at least 2 were playing Prince "Party like it's 1999," we tuned as many radios as we could. Turned out that 6 stations ended 1999 with Prince, and started 2000 with "It's the end of the world as we know it," by REM.
My sister hosted a party, I was testing my local machine to see if it'd survive, but some asshat party guest decided to pull the house's master breaker at midnight. My test was ruined, and nobody enjoyed the joke.
Y2K is treated like a tempest in a teapot, but it really only was that way because of a lot of work behind the scenes to make it so.
At the end of the day the worst thing that happened to my family was that Dad had to buy a new version of Quicken, because our old copy of 4.0 didn't support 4-digit years... But imagine if that was every Fortune 500 and state government that suddenly couldn't process payroll or invoices, or if power plants or water treatment systems stopped being able to control electronic systems because of a date/time mismatch between the SCADA systems and the operators' terminals? Y2K was a non-issue because a lot of people spent a lot of time going through a lot of code to be sure that critical systems would continue to work as expected.
That "outdated" programming language still runs large parts of the world economy and administration. Cobol will survive humanity, it's like a cockroach.
Oh, yeah. I certainly didn’t mean “outdated” as an insult; only that hardware/software engineers didn’t think their machines would still be in use by 2000.
Millions of man hours spent preventing a total disaster, and the only recognition they got was that movie. It's the epitome of "When you do things right people won't be sure you've done anything at all."
Dec. 31, 1999 myself and ALL of the employees of the small city that I worked for were all commanded to be onsite by 9:00pm. We spent the night playing cards in the lunchroom. I was being payed double time for playing cribbage. There were plenty of issues on Jan 1 but they were all due to nobody being on shift as they all went home at 7:00am Jan 1, 2000.
Me too, and I came into the comments to mention what had just occurred to me, despite having seen this exact image shared at least a half dozen times before.
Working in IT at the time, we were fairly sure things would be fine by the time New Years Eve rolled around,. Even going so far as to camp overnight outside at the Rose Parade, a wild time on a normal year and ridiculous in 1999 with Colorado Blvd packed with partyers.
The moment came and, of course, nothing really happened...except some GENIUS thought it would be a good idea to set off a giant firework at the college next door, scaring the living shit out of a few thousand people. Good times.
I remember some 20 years ago I bought a LaCie Porsche external HDD. It died. Just wouldn’t turn on. The enclosure was pretty firmly built so getting it open wasn’t really trivial. I was at BB and just out of sheer curiosity in what they’d say, I went up to their repair department. Three kids who were supposed to be trained professionals claimed it was not possible to open without damaging the drive. They said they tried several times and all HDDs were DOA out the enclosure.
Not sold. I went home. Took about an hour of prying (I didn’t want to damage anything) but I got the case open to reveal a bargain basement Seagate. Connected. Worked just fine. As I had originally surmised.
Always wanted to see just what they did to theirs to not salvage the internal drive.
HDDs are not consumer serviceable. They were right about that. They shouldn't be opened outside of an industrial clean room. But the actual enclosure? Of course you can open it. Best Buy mostly employs kids who passed the CompTIA A+ exam. So they do know stuff, but they often lack experience.
I never understood why those stickers were put on computers because it just scared technologically illiterate people which back then was basically everyone.
They 100% knew it wasn't going to be a problem for at least a year before the event because they fixed it. The only computers that would really be affected was anything that wasn't networked, because it couldn't download the update. But if it wasn't networked, then you could just change the time to some earlier point to avoid the issue. Then download the patch as and when you can get it on a disk.
The blatant incompetence of like every single computer nerd in the world.
All because not one fuckin person thought about what happens when you run out of number space for the date.
I take it you were still in nappies back then. Because it wasn't incompetence at all, it was a simple trade off. Storage space and memory on early computers was expensive and very limited. This is rather like IPV4 - who would have guessed WAY back then that there would be more than a bajillion individual IP devices?
For Y2K, we're talking mainly 1960s-1970s, so it's partly "hey, we have 40 years to deal with this", which programmers in the late 70s and 80s were well aware of and began dealing with. The issue with the Y2K scare was way over-hyped... it was really just legacy systems that were any kind of actual problem. The whole "turn off your computer" thing was utter nonsense.
I remember hearing all the hype and decided to take my poor 486 running win 3.11 and checked the date in the bios, went further in the future than that pc lasted, set the date to 2000 then booted to windows. the only issue I saw was that the stuff I saved in 2000 had the date 19;0. Fun times
This is rather like IPV4 - who would have guessed WAY back then that there would be more than a bajillion individual IP devices?
Except the response to this wasn't "Let's figure out a timecode that uses letters instead of numbers and has accuracy down to the femtosecond and enough space for 10^20 years." IPv6 was massive overkill.