> This problem might not be taken seriously after the Y2K debacle.
I wish people would stop saying things like that. I was one of many programmers who spent some overtime over the course of about a year on fixing code in 1998-9. I was just the junior programmer at the time; the head guy in the department had some nearly sleepless nights around then.
I can promise you that in one East Bay school district, nobody would've gotten their paychecks, report cards would not have worked, DNS would have stopped working for the entire school network, and finance & budget would have had some really crazy errors in the output -- those are the systems I still remember requiring the most attention.
Y2K was a "debacle" because a bunch of people busted their asses fixing old code.
It feels a lot like pulling two consecutive all-nighters as an engineer on a project, to bring the project up to its deadline on-time and under-budget, only to have your department manager the next morning stroll in, well-rested, coffee cup in hand, and say, "See? Told you it was no big deal."
I remember a lot of hype and no actual problems. I suspect others do as well, and this could lead to people thinking about the whole problem as over-hyped and a non-issue.
Not saying that it's correct, but that's the catch-22 of preventing problems: If you do a too good job, nobody will notice =/
I wish people would stop saying things like that. I was one of many programmers who spent some overtime over the course of about a year on fixing code in 1998-9. I was just the junior programmer at the time; the head guy in the department had some nearly sleepless nights around then.
I can promise you that in one East Bay school district, nobody would've gotten their paychecks, report cards would not have worked, DNS would have stopped working for the entire school network, and finance & budget would have had some really crazy errors in the output -- those are the systems I still remember requiring the most attention.
Y2K was a "debacle" because a bunch of people busted their asses fixing old code.
It feels a lot like pulling two consecutive all-nighters as an engineer on a project, to bring the project up to its deadline on-time and under-budget, only to have your department manager the next morning stroll in, well-rested, coffee cup in hand, and say, "See? Told you it was no big deal."