Dark Jaguar
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2006
- Messages
- 1,666
This reminds me of the very silly media interest back in 1999 of some 12-year old kid in New Zealand or some other far-flung place who was touted as having solved the Y2K problem. It was unbelievable that whatever news organization fell for it didn't get the basic fact that the problem was well understood and the solution was simply hard-slogging through old code, which was well underway.
Same goes for the divide by zero problem. If your software crashes on that, then you've got to build in a little bit better error capture.
Y2K... yeah that sure did expose the ignorance of the masses didn't it? Before 2000, everyone was freaking out because they vastly overestimated the impact the glitch might have and vastly underestimated the ability of programmers to solve it just by recoding the old programs (which, while tough, was still not nearly so tough as to be impractical). Then E2K came and went, and everyone was wondering where that Earth shattering kaboom was. Well, not only was that not going to happen, what little WOULD have happened (little is a relative term, relative to the hype) was fixed in plenty of time. Those that didn't get it fixed didn't really do any damage for not having done so. So, the problem is they just assumed there never was a problem and everyone started thinking programmers were to blame for all the fuss, instead of themselves.
Annoying really... Too many people didn't bother to do any research. The problem was real, though entirely overblown. The majority of electronic devices don't even keep the date, and those that did weren't going to self destruct just because they maxed out their timers. It was just those more important book keeping programs, namely in banks, that were the major issue. The damage would have been in terms of monies and that's about it, but it was solved in plenty of time.
So now there's the "stigma" of that whole episode which by all rights was caused by the media and the masses.
