Ive read some sites muttering dire warnings about Y2K. The information in these sites is close to worthless. In the referred page, I saw not one item of vital information, only "trust me - we have a problem" hogwash.
The Y2K problem is a reflection of:
The first mainframes (which means the large, commercial beasts) had 124 KB (1 KB is roughly 1 thousand characters) of main memory, and 3 removable disks which each held 32 MB (1 MB is roughly 1 million characters) of data. It filled a room, needed water cooling etc. As a comparison, my main PC has 144 MB main memory and a 5500 MB (5.5 GB) disk.
Within banking and finance, the Y2K bug is partially fixed already. Pension funds, life insurance etc. all have to calculate risks and premiums for a number of years into the future. When you apply for a loan for your pole shift survival center, the down payment plan will have to deal with dates and payments after Y2K. If the Y2K challenge turns into any kind of serious problems, it will be either because somebody will be using the Y2K situation for their own purposes (Government bodies, organized crime etc.), or due to problems created by unnecessary panicking (emptying stores etc.) I think it is vital to stay focused on the real challenges ahead. Forget Y2K.
Offered by Jan