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


To: Cheeky Kid who wrote (1591)5/3/1998 3:04:00 PM
From: Steve Woas  Respond to of 9818
 
Sire,
Apparently, people just wanted to get rid of you and they are giving you bad advise. Not only does the BIOS need to be Y2K compliant. But---they neglected to inform you that each and every piece of software that you run also has to be Y2K compliant if your are to avoid Y2K problems with your PC.

LoL,

Steve

P.S. It is not the PC's that the world is really concerned with.



To: Cheeky Kid who wrote (1591)5/3/1998 3:17:00 PM
From: C.K. Houston  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 9818
 
<Steve, Do you have Y2K tunnel vision? Oh, and this post is being typed on a computer which date has been set too 2006. It has been powered off and on, and it works fine.>

You're just lucky. Some aren't.

How about when some people did that standard PC test - changing date to 12/31/99 and waiting to see how it handled the roll-over.

Someone doing the test forgot to change date back to current date, after seeing that it SUCCESSFULLY handled date-rollover. Two weeks later ... when date should have been 1/14/2000 ... computer showed a date of December 2000!!!! Didn't discover the problem until printer and computer stopped working properly.

For more information:

TIME DILATION: SECONDS SPEED UP SUBSTANTIALLY
NEW Problem discovered August '97

intranet.ca
286 & 386 prevalent in manufacturing & process control
More on Time Dilation
Message 2927104

No one still understands why this is happening. Seems to be random occurrences.

Cheryl




To: Cheeky Kid who wrote (1591)5/4/1998 3:46:00 AM
From: foobert  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 9818
 
Have tested some items around the house

Have an 8 year old VCR. You can set time and day of week, but it does not know about year. Therefore I expect it will show Saturday on Jan 1/2000. Same with my 15 year old computerized termostat that has a programmable temperature setback for different days of the week. Microwave oven? same thing. The key concept to watch for is if an imbedded device includes year in it's date setting. Cars? both are ten years old - don't know if there may be a problem.

Even tried a 10 year old Radio Shack Hex calculator that has a built in timer and calendar. The calendar function correctly shows the right day of week for January 1/2000, and Feb 29/2000.

One of two computers at home has a non-compliant BIOS. Looks like the solution for that is a motherboard replacement. It is a P75 and is getting long in the tooth anyways.

Did an experiment using an unused 200 MB hard drive. Hooked it up to my Windows NT machine (which is y2k compliant) as the only drive, installed WinNT 4.0, and my Intuit apps, and ran several tests where the time passed from Dec 31/1999 to Jan 1/2000 and from Feb 28/2000 to Feb 29/2000 both powered up and shutdown. Everything worked just fine - reports spanning 1998 to 2000, etc. Not a totally complete test, but enough to show me that the important things do work.

There is a lot to do even on a home PC. Running explorer, and listing all the EXE and DLL files shows hundreds of files. And then there is data. To be assured that a system is y2k compliant would theoretically require testing of all the executable components, and examining all the data files. Will try to test items I feel may be vulnerable or that I rely on, but will not likely have time to do exhaustive testing of everything.

My opinion - the sun will rise like it always has before, there will be many minor nuisances, some major ones too. Probably there may be some big catastrophies as well, but the key word here is "probably". I don't think anyone knows just what the probabilites are for each scenario at this time. However, awareness, remediation and testing will shift the probabilities in our favor over time.