NATION IMPEACHMENT Nightmare's End WORKSHEET: Voices in the Impeachment Debate CONGRESS Capitol Hill Meltdown LITTLETON What Can the Schools Do? CAMPAIGN 2000 The Money Chasm Y2K The History and the Hype WORLD KOSOVO Terrain of Terror Why He Blinked INDEPENDENCE MOVEMENTS Freedom Fighters WORKSHEET: Who Gets To Be a State? RUSSIA Survival of the Fittest ASIAN ECONOMY Has Asia Recovered? CHINA China's Arms Race MIDDLE EAST Jordan: Dawn of a New Era Israel: Love at First Wonk AFRICA The Heart of Darkness LATIN AMERICA Up From the Flood WORKSHEET: Current Events in Review Answers |
![]() By CHRIS TAYLOR
Two digits. that's all. just two lousy digits. 1957, they should have written, not 57. 1970 rather than 70. Most important,
01-01-2000 would have been infinitely preferable to 01-01-00. Though most of the dire predictions connected with that date--the Year 2000 computer bug's moment of truth--are
unlikely to come true, a little computer-generated chaos would provide a fitting conclusion to a 40-year story of human frailties: greed, shortsightedness and a tendency to rush into new technologies before thinking them through.
Wrong. Nothing, especially in the world of computing, is ever that simple. "It was the fault of everybody, just everybody," says Robert Bemer, the onetime IBM whiz kid who wrote much of cobol. "If Grace Hopper and I were at fault, it was for making the language so easy that anybody could get in on the act." And anybody did, including a group of Mormons in the late '50s who wanted to enlist the newfangled machines in their massive genealogy project--clearly the kind of work that calls for thinking outside the 20th-century box. Bemer obliged by inventing the picture clause, which allowed for a four-digit year. From this point on, more than 40 years ahead of schedule, the technology was available for every computer in the world to become Y2K compliant.
Programmers ignored Bemer's fix. And so did
his bosses at IBM, who unwittingly shipped the Y2K bug in their System/360 computers, an industry standard every bit as powerful in the '60s as Windows is today. By the end of the decade, Big Blue had effectively set the two-digit date in stone. Every machine, every manual, every maintenance guy would tell you the year was 69, not 1969. "The general consensus was that this was the way you programmed," says an IBM spokesman. "We
recognize the potential for lawsuits on this issue."
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