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Overview
When midnight arrives, computers around the world will change their system dates. January 1, 2000 will be the date - or will it? Will the date change from 12-31-99 to 01-01-00? Whoops! What happened to the century digits in the date? Most programmers and virtually all hardware manufacturers were shortsighted not to foresee the disaster that lurks at the turn of the century. There is a very strong possibility that this bug is in any program that uses a year in a calculation. That is, the millions of lines of instructions running daily on hundreds of millions of computers - both large and small - could come to a screeching halt, or worse, generate inaccurate data that is hard to uncover. Fixing the problem is far from simple. The solution involves a sizable commitment that needs immediate attention. Solving the Year 2000 Problem explores this never-before-seen problem in great detail and explains the inside ways to stamp out the bug before the bug stamps out your programs."...examines the costs of correcting the problem, the danger of not correcting it, and he provides proven techniques for resolving the problem."
Editorials
Booknews
Shows how to avert disaster when computer systems change their dates on January 1, 2000. Tells where to look for potential software problems and offers solutions, and outlines a methodology for dealing with the problem. Includes addresses of vendors and product descriptions. For those familiar with computer business applications. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.Book Details
Published
February 7, 1997
Publisher
AP Professional
Pages
264
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780125755603