Y2K Bug / New Blog
Y2K bug, also called Year 2000 bug or Millennium Bug, a
problem in the coding of computerized systems that was projected to create
havoc in computers and computer networks around the world at the beginning of
the year 2000 (in metric measurements K stands for thousand). After more than a
year of international alarm, feverish preparations, and programming
corrections, few major failures occurred in the transition from December 31,
1999, to January 1, 2000.
Until the 1990s, many computer programs (especially those
written in the early days of computers) were designed to abbreviate four-digit
years as two digits in order to save memory space. These computers could
recognize “98” as “1998” but would be unable to recognize “00” as “2000,”
perhaps interpreting it to mean 1900. Many feared that when the clocks struck
midnight on January 1, 2000, many affected computers would be using an
incorrect date and thus fail to operate properly unless the computers’ software
was repaired or replaced before that date. Other computer programs that
projected budgets or debts into the future could begin malfunctioning in 1999
when they made projections into 2000. In addition, some computer software did
not take into account that the year 2000 was a leap year. And even before the
dawn of 2000, it was feared that some computers might fail on September 9, 1999
(9/9/99), because early programmers often used a series of 9s to indicate the
end of a program.
It was feared that such a misreading would lead to software
and hardware failures in computers used in such important areas as banking,
utilities systems, government records, and so on, with the potential for
widespread chaos on and following January 1, 2000. Mainframe computers, including
those typically used to run insurance companies and banks, were thought to be
subject to the most serious Y2K problems, but even newer systems that used
networks of desktop computers were considered vulnerable.
The Y2K problem was not limited to computers running
conventional software, however. Many devices containing computer chips, ranging
from elevators to temperature-control systems in commercial buildings to
medical equipment, were believed to be at risk, which necessitated the checking
of these “embedded systems” for sensitivity to calendar dates.
In the United States, business and government technology
teams worked feverishly with a goal of checking systems and fixing software
before the end of December 1999. Although some industries were well on the way
to solving the Y2K problem, most experts feared that the federal government and
state and local governments were lagging behind. A Y2K preparedness survey
commissioned in late 1998 by Cap Gemini America, a New York computer industry
consulting firm, showed that among 13 economic sectors studied in the United
States, government was the least ready for Y2K. (Rated highest for preparedness
was the software industry.)
In an effort to encourage companies to share critical
information about Y2K, U.S. Pres. Bill Clinton in October 1998 signed the Year
2000 Information and Readiness Disclosure Act. The law was designed to
encourage American companies to share Y2K data by offering them limited
liability protection for sharing information about Y2K products, methods, and
best practices.
In western Europe the European Commission issued a report
warning that efforts to solve Y2K in many European Union member countries were
insufficient, particularly in terms of the cross-border cooperation needed to
be ready by 2000. The British government announced that its armed forces would
be prepared in time and would provide assistance to local police if utilities,
transportation systems, or emergency services failed.
Many other countries, notably Asian countries suffering at
that time from an ongoing economic crisis as well as small or geographically
isolated countries, were thought to be less well prepared. It was uncertain how
this would affect the tightly integrated world economy and physical
infrastructure. In mid-December 1998 the UN convened its first international
conference on Y2K in an attempt to share information and crisis-management
efforts and established the International Y2K Cooperation Center, based in
Washington, D.C.
An estimated $300 billion was spent (almost half in the
United States) to upgrade computers and application programs to be
Y2K-compliant. As the first day of January 2000 dawned and it became apparent
that computerized systems were intact, reports of relief filled the news media.
These were followed by accusations that the likely incidence of failure had
been greatly exaggerated from the beginning. Those who had worked in
Y2K-compliance efforts insisted that the threat had been real. They maintained
that the continued viability of computerized systems was proof that the
collective effort had succeeded. In following years, some analysts pointed out
that programming upgrades that had been part of the Y2K-compliance campaign had
improved computer systems and that the benefits of these improvements would
continue to be seen for some time to come.
New Blog
Okay everyone, starting next year (possibly tomorrow) I will be writing a new blog. I'm not getting rid of this one however. I'm starting a new blog to add to my already extremely busy schedule. The details will come when it's created, but I want this new blog to be more like what this blog was originally. More personal, more about writing and sharing stories. And it may not be an everyday thing too. It'll be more loose with the schedule, but I'll try and make it everyday if I can find the time and the inspiration.
Let me know what you all think about this.
See you all tomorrow.
Buh-bye.
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