olafur-neal:jmathieson-fic:inner-muse:shinyhill:xiki-pumpkin:kou32:silks-stuff:someoneintheshadow446
olafur-neal:jmathieson-fic:inner-muse:shinyhill:xiki-pumpkin:kou32:silks-stuff:someoneintheshadow446:musicalluna:cumaeansibyl:all-things-olicity:forloveofreason:shananaomi:jaybushman:spytap:ralfmaximus:faisdm:the-most-calamitous:jibini:top-lotad-breeder:chocogoat:what. why? someone pls explain to me pls i wasnt born yet in 1999 why turn computer off before midnight? what happen if u dont?y2k lol everyone was like “the supervirus is gonna take over the world and ruin everything and end the world!!!”This is the oldest I’ve ever felt. Right now.WHAT THE FUCK DO YOU MEAN YOU WEREN’T BORN YET IN 1999.Ahh the Millenium bug.It wasn’t a virus, it was an issue with how some old computers at the time were programmed to deal with dates. Basically some computers with older operating systems didn’t have anything in place to deal with the year reaching 99 and looping around to 00. It was believed that this inability to sync with the correct date would cause issues, and even crash entire systems the moment the date changed.People flipped out about it, convinced that the date discrepancy between netwoked systems would bring down computers everywhere and shut down the internet and so all systems relying on computers, including plane navigation etc. would go down causing worldwide chaos. It was genuinely believed that people should all switch off computers to avoid this. One or two smart people spoke up and said “um hey, this actually will only effect a few very outdated computers and they’ll just display the wrong date, so it probably won’t be harmful” but were largely ignored because people selling books about the end of the world were talking louder.In the end, absolutely nothing happened.Oh gosh.I’ve been a programmer working for various government agencies since the early 1990s and I can say with some confidence:NOTHING HAPPENED BECAUSE WE WORKED VERY HARD FIXING SHIT THAT MOST DEFINITELY WOULD HAVE BROKEN ON 1-JAN-2000.One example I personally worked on: vaccination databases.My contract was with the CDC to coordinate immunization registries — you know, kids’ vaccine histories. What they got, when they got it, and (most importantly) which vaccines they were due to get next and when. These were state-wide registries, containing millions of records each.Most of these systems were designed in the 1970s and 1980s, and stored the child’s DOB year as only two digits. This means that — had we not fixed it — just about every child in all the databases I worked on would have SUDDENLY AGED OUT OF THE PROGRAM 1-JAN-2000.In other words: these kids would suddenly be “too old” to receive critical vaccines.Okay, so that’s not a nuke plant exploding or airplanes dropping from the sky. In fact, nothing obvious would have occurred come Jan 1st.BUTWithout the software advising doctors when to give vaccinations, an entire generation’s immunity to things like measles, mumps, smallpox (etc) would have been compromised. And nobody would even know there was a problem for months — possibly years — after.You think the fun & games caused by a few anti-vaxers is bad?Imagine whole populations going unvaccinated by accident… one case of measles and the death toll might be measured in millions.This is one example I KNOW to be true, because I was there.I also know that in the years leading up to 2000 there were ad-hoc discussion groups (particularly alt.risk) of amazed programmers and project managers that uncovered year-2000 traps… and fixed them.Quietly, without fanfare. In many cases because admitting there was a problem would have resulted in a lawsuit by angry customers. But mostly because it was our job to fix those design flaws before anyone was inconvenienced or hurt.So, yeah… all that Y2K hysteria was for nothing, because programmers worked their asses off to make sure it was for nothing.Bolding mine.Absolutely true. My Mom worked like crazy all throughout 1998 and 1999 on dozens of systems to avoid Y2K crashes. Nothing major happened because people worked to made sure it didn’t.Now if we could just harness that concept for some of the other major issues facing us today. this meme came so far since i saw it this morning. god i love tumblr teaching tumblr about history.As a young Sys Admin during Y2K, I can confirm that it was SRS BZNS. I worked for a major pharmaceutical company at the time. They spent millions of dollars on consultant and programmer hours, not to mention their own employees’ time, to fix all their in-house software as well as replace it with new systems. Sys Admins like myself were continually deploying patches, updating firmware, and deploying new systems in the months leading up to Y2K. Once that was done, though, the programmers went home and cashed their checks.When the FATEFUL HOUR came along, it wasn’t just one hour. For a global company with offices in dozens of countries, it was 24 hours of being alert and on-call. I imagine that other large organizations had similar setups with entire IT departments working in shifts to monitor everything. Everyone was on a hair trigger, too, so the slightest problem caused ALL HANDS ON DECK pages to go out.Yes, we had pagers.For hard numbers IDC’s 2006 calculation put the total US cost of remediation, before and after, at $147 billion - that’s in 1999 dollars. That paid for an army of programmers, including calling up retired grandparents from the senior center because COBOL and FORTRAN apps from the ‘60s needed fixing.Also note that there were some problems, including $13 billion in remediation included in the figure above. Some of these involved nuclear power plants, medical equipment, and “a customer at a New York State video rental store had a bill for $91,250, the cost of renting the movie ‘The General’s Daughter’ for 100 years.”Y2K was anything but nothing.@figure-forevertfw you do your job so fucking well that everyone thinks you weren’t necessary in the first place :(salute our COBOL cowpokes and other Y2K wranglers, they saved all our assesanother important lesson we learned: a shitload of stuff in the ‘90s was still running programs from the ‘60s and ‘70s. it’s hard to justify the expense and trouble of a massive upgrade when things are working “fine” – easier to say “well, I suppose we’ll need to change at some point, but not now”and if things really are working “fine” you can let them go on for a while but every so often you run into something like Y2K where the software simply wasn’t designed to handle certain eventualities. can’t really blame the programmers, either. if you were writing shit in the ‘60s, would you expect people to still be using it in the science-fiction year of 2000? that’s not a real year! you might be dead by then!so, y’know, you don’t always need the latest and greatest for everything you’re doing – how much power do you really need for an inventory system? – but regular upgrades are a Good Ideanerds quietly saving the world. this is superhero nonsense i love itHoly shit so THIS was why my older cousins were saying all the computers were going to die and four year old me was like “what.”Within a certain FTSE 100 retailer, I worked on the millennium bug project for over 8 months to make sure that none of our 2,400 mainframe programs would crash. Out of those, over 900 needed changing and testing.On New Year even while others were out drinking and being merry, my colleague and I sat in a dark room together until 5am keeping one eye on our computer screens, and the other on a large TV I’d brought in for movies.Rest of the world: Nothing went wrong! hahahMe: You’re welcome.Thank you for your servicethis is so crazy?? I remember Y2K happening and being scared of an apocolypse, and nothing happening. I never knew something drastic really *could* have happened!!Thank yallI’m here as ex-tech support too. Worked at a merchant bank. The amount of work that went into fixing things before Y2K happened was absolutely immense. Started like two years before 1/1/00.As a software engineer who was 8 in the year 2000, I salute you all.I was working for Northern Telecom at the time, and we had teams of coders who spent FIVE YEARS going through every single line of code to make sure that the phones would still work come midnight-oh-one, 2000.My husband wants to work with code for a living (fullstack dev mostly) and he’s been working on building his portfolio and omg the amount of work that goes into his projects. One time he changed some section of code and missed the data equivalent of a period at the end of a sentence and the website he was building would not run. One tiny error in months of work and it wouldn’t run. I honestly have no real idea what he does. I can’t even imagine having to save the entire population of earth from missed vaccines and massive debt just because a sentence of code doesn’t work. Like how much work had to have gone into that boggles my mind. -- source link
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