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1 posted on 08/11/2018 12:29:20 PM PDT by SamAdams76
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To: SamAdams76

Y2K was the Perfect Storm, the year Global Ice Age met Global warming.

Yet again all the concern was for naught.


105 posted on 08/11/2018 2:20:46 PM PDT by LeoTDB69
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To: SamAdams76
The Calvinists were convinced that this was going to be the breakdown of civilization and that a new predetermined Christian order was going to rise up and rule the world ("...of the increase of His Government there will be no end"). I had friends who bought into this nonsense purchasing thousands and thousands of dollars in MREs, guns, ammo, water purifiers, and water tanks, only to sell them all at discount on Ebay.

My question to them after the Y2K debacle was, "are you sure you are 'the elect' if you so clearly believed the false prophesies of Gary North, RJ Rushdoony, David Chilton, etc.
110 posted on 08/11/2018 2:46:21 PM PDT by Jan_Sobieski (Sanctification)
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To: SamAdams76

There still should have been massive failures because, people being human, a lot of computers would not have been updated. I don’t think I heard of one instance.


112 posted on 08/11/2018 2:49:31 PM PDT by PLMerite ("They say that we were Cold Warriors. Yes, and a bloody good show, too." - Robert Conquest)
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To: SamAdams76

I worked on code and programs for y2k fixes.

There were definitely things that these programs would have gotten wrong, and if they involved databases it couldmhave been a pain. probably fixable but still. real time stuff getting wrong calcs or weird data could be bad, could be unpredictable what the overall results would be.

Its also considering compounded misktakes across glitching programs and sysrems that talk to each other and rely on the others data.

I definitely saw things that required code fixes to ensure and eliminate problems.

Imagine nothing was done until everything started cascading failures due to inter-program and cross-system dependencies.


113 posted on 08/11/2018 2:51:05 PM PDT by Secret Agent Man ( Gone Galt; Not averse to Going Bronson.)
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To: SamAdams76

I remember there was a web site that watched around the world as the clocks passed midnight, watching for any news of problems. As I recall, I quit watching about 3am.

Watched several movies while waiting for the world to end :)


114 posted on 08/11/2018 2:52:45 PM PDT by upchuck (When I first arrived in Washington, the extent of anger and partisanship stunned me. ~ CongressmanX)
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To: SamAdams76

I was thrilled to get 1k for working NYEve......as NOC managers we stood around and stared at each other at midnight.....when nothing happened....


120 posted on 08/11/2018 3:09:22 PM PDT by 1217Chic
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To: SamAdams76

Out of hundreds and hundreds of program testing I found one that needed to be changed.


121 posted on 08/11/2018 3:10:25 PM PDT by Donnafrflorida (Thru Him all things are possible.)
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To: SamAdams76

I remember it well. At the time, the application I was supporting was written in a 4GL that treated all dates as the number of days since 1600 or so. Because of that, most of the “changes” I made were cosmetic, to make sure that my input files and output files used 4 digit years. For our largest input feed, that was not a problem, since we had proactively set the dates to 4 digits a few years before when we were rewriting the interface file.

About the only positive thing that came from Y2K occurred in September, 2001. Our company had about 9 floors of staff in WTC2 (low enough that all but 1 or 2 made it out), and had to relocate to our emergency site in New Jersey. Since Y2K forced us to revisit and revamp our contingency plans company wide, we were up and running in New Jersey by noon on the 11th.


133 posted on 08/11/2018 3:24:13 PM PDT by ssaftler (It's not the "deep state". It's the "odoriferous oligarchy")
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To: SamAdams76

big scare push by Gary North.

Cobol developers - the dinosaurs - were back and we were hungry.
Being a cobol “tester”, my best earning years were 97 thru 99.

Life was good.


145 posted on 08/11/2018 3:34:36 PM PDT by stylin19a (Best.Election.Of.All-Times.Ever.In.The.History.Of.Ever)
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To: SamAdams76

I was the head of it at two companies at the time. It was my job to do Y2K remediation. What frightened me was that when I ask the power company to give me proof that they had done a remediation effort to avoid the bug they said they did the best we can but we can’t guarantee anything basically. That got me worried.


146 posted on 08/11/2018 3:40:54 PM PDT by DouglasKC
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To: SamAdams76
The interesting thing was that to truly celebrate the millennial properly we should have celebrated it in 2001. However, doing so was considered to be nerdy to the extreme.

Instead we got a somewhat subdued celebration as lots of people decided to hunker down rather than go out and celebrate.

So ironically it was the nerds that saved the world in 2000, but people still didn't trust them enough to go out and celebrate the non-nerdy millennial.

147 posted on 08/11/2018 3:47:20 PM PDT by who_would_fardels_bear
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To: SamAdams76

I was badly fooled. I distrust computers so thoroughly, I just assumed there would be minor issues like stuck elevators and broken ATMs. I didn’t want to even be out and about, so I hunkered down on the most exciting New Years Eve in my lifetime. The Turn of the Century. Not one single issue occurred. It was the greatest non-event in world history.


156 posted on 08/11/2018 4:10:55 PM PDT by Freedom_Is_Not_Free (End the Mueller Gestapo now. Free the Donald.)
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To: SamAdams76

I remember Freeper Dog saying he had 500 rolls of TP in a shed.


170 posted on 08/11/2018 5:09:55 PM PDT by MomwithHope
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To: SamAdams76

I remember celebrating New Years and hardly anyone was drinking.

I worked for a bank and it was not until the next morning that we finished doing the verifications. What a pain in the ass.


172 posted on 08/11/2018 5:44:53 PM PDT by Vermont Lt
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To: SamAdams76

For months, our manager kept stressing to us to make sure all our code was Y2K compliant (it was). We were forced to come in to work New Year’s Eve, December 31, 1999 to handle any strangeness come midnight. Well, the only code that failed was our manager’s, so we sat around talking and eating while she fixed her code. Haha.


178 posted on 08/11/2018 8:22:53 PM PDT by grateful
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To: SamAdams76

There was no talking to the Y2K believers.


179 posted on 08/11/2018 8:28:14 PM PDT by Mr.Unique (The government, by its very nature, cannot give except what it first takes.)
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To: SamAdams76

Yes. I didn’t expect much more than moderate disruptions. Our purchasing system at work had been confused for months due to dates and continued to be for weeks afterward.
The only major issue at work was a 24 hour period where all the manufacturing consoles weren’t sure what program to use so we set them to defaults or pre-determined settings to get it running again.


185 posted on 08/11/2018 9:28:40 PM PDT by tbw2
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To: SamAdams76

I worked the two years beforehand as a contractor fixing software for Y2K. It was tedious work but it certainly paid the bills.
And at the big moment itself I was flying across the Atlantic in an airliner! The aeroplane was almost empty but when one of the other passengers discovered what I did for a living, she very earnestly asked, “We will be alright, won’t we?” “Don’t worry,” I said. “This plane is not about to turn upside down at the stroke of midnight.”


188 posted on 08/12/2018 2:17:54 AM PDT by Mr Radical (In times of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act)
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To: SamAdams76

My car started the next morning so I knew all was going to be OK...


189 posted on 08/12/2018 4:02:51 AM PDT by trebb (So many "experts" with so little experience in what they preach....even here...)
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