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Technology Stocks : Discuss Year 2000 Issues -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Lane3 who wrote (7555)8/1/1999 3:08:00 PM
From: Ken  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9818
 
Here is a Y2K computer fix, in case it is of benefit to you or anyone else, sent me by a business associate. Bearcub said he successfully implemented it.

<<
For those of you with Windows 95, 98 or NT this information will prove
very valuable.

Double click on "My Computer".
Double click on "Control Panel".
Double click on "Regional Settings" icon.
Click on the "Date" tab at the top of the page.
Where it says, "Short Date Smple", look and see if it shows a "two
digit" year.

Of course it does. That's the default setting for Windows 95,
Windows 98 and NT. This date RIGHT HERE is the date that feeds
application
software and WILL NOT rollover in the year 2000. It will roll over to
00.

Click on the down arrow button on the "Short Date Style" box and
select the option that shows, mm/dd/yyyy. Be sure your selection has
four
Y's showing, not two. Then click on "Apply" and then click on "OK"
at the bottom.

Easy enough to fix. However, every single installation of Windows
worldwide is defaulted to fail Y2K rollover. How many people know about
it?
How many people know to change that? What will be the effect?
Who knows. But this is another example of the pervasiveness and
systematic nature of the problem.

Now YOU know - pass it on.



To: Lane3 who wrote (7555)8/1/1999 5:53:00 PM
From: Ken  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 9818
 
<Ken, thanks for your thoughtful>Hi,Karen, couple of questions for you.

and personal response. I, too, would miss my classical music
.....who are your favorite composers? conductors?

as well as plentiful hot water for long showers, libraries/data banks full of reading material, raspberries all year 'round... I really don't think we'll have to do without them (well, maybe the raspberries for the rest of the winter). If we do, I think you will find that you adapt.
....I can do without the raspberries, won't have to do w/o books, thanks to battery-powered lanterns, and...
at least there are now battery-powered cd players AND mini-speakers, so with enough batteries (I mean, like hundreds of dollars worth of batteries), we can still enjoy the symphony! But, not like with my ultra hi-end system, but at least we can still have MUSIC!

If things go badly, a little switch goes off in your head telling you that raspberries and minty-fresh breath no longer matter and bugs don't taste so bad.
......you eat bugs?...you cook them, what...Cajun or French style?

Since you asked so nicely :), here are the issues that have my attention.
- Nuclear accidents: fairly low probability; terrible consequences; way beyond my ability to deal with if it happens so why worry.

....I agree- I think gas masks for WMD, shelters is too far out of the question.

- Power, water, sewer: Low probability in my part of the world, limited duration, minor consequences. If I lived where things froze in the winter, I'd be less cavalier and doing more research. For me, this warrants hurricane/snowstorm type of preparation.
....if you have a very close-by large, clean source of water, you are /will be one of the few fortunate ones!

- Computer problems: High likelihood of something happening somewhere, low likelihood of it being massive, insoluble, or irreversible.

......what about banking cascading cross-faults? what about huge potential for re-corruption, due to the very hi % of espically small/mid companies that won't even come close?

- Supply chains: Likely, particularly beyond North America/Euroland either because the supply chains break or because of excess inventory stored to avoid the breaks. Little or no personal consequence, but expected portfolio consequence similar to the Asian-induced problem last fall.
....this is a major difference we have-due to backward, forward, and cross cascading problems I see occuring in every industry...

- Stock market: Medium to high probability, primarily due to financial prudence compounded by panic rather than organic problems. Consequence still being pondered.

....there are a lot of permutations with this one.
And, one of my senior concerns,one of which I study analysises and reports daily, being in the market so heavily.

- Dominos: I am a systems analyst by training and am much appreciative of the action of dominos, but I put this in with nuclear accidents, don't worry about it, and encourage others not to either (hint, hint), so as not to induce panic (see "stock market" above).
Unless I missed something,
....this perplexes me as you said you know about sytemic/domino effects??? Are you saying you just don't worry about it, or you don't see the potential/probability as I do, for a universally catestropic results from multi-diminsional domino effects?

I have excellent analysises/papers on Domino effects- would you like me to post any of them?

the rest of the issues are below my radar level.

As you can see, I think "the greatest thing we have to fear is fear itself."

...I fear the masses' fear when they all start fearing/panicing en masse!

Ken

Karen