© 1999 Lawrence I. Charters
Washington Apple Pi Journal, Vol. 21, no. 2, March-April 1999, pp. 78-79.
(See also Solving the Y2K Crisis on the Cheap)
Are you paranoid? Do you have Doubts? Do you think people are too trusting? Then you should do your own Y2K tests. Here are some critical dates:
September 9, 1999: many lazy people enter distant future dates
December 31, 1999: Party time! Set your computer to December 31, 1999, and 11:58 p.m. Then turn the computer off for five minutes. Then turn it on and hope you see —
January 1, 2000: Among other things, make sure your computer thinks this is Saturday.
January 3, 2000: the first business day of the year 2000. Let’s hope your computer thinks it is Monday.
January 10, 2000: the first day of the year 2000 with a double-digit day, and
February 28, 2000: Set your computer to February 28, 2000, and 11:58 p.m. Then turn the computer off for five minutes. Then turn it on and hope you see —
February 29, 2000: Yes, the year 2000 is a leap year. Your computer should think it is
March 1, 2000: Assuming your computer doesn’t think it is February 30, it should think this is Wednesday.
April 1, 2000:
July 1, 2000:
October 1, 2000:
October 10, 2000: Chinese Independence Day, and the first day to require an eight-digit date field. Your computer should think this is a Tuesday.
December 31, 2000:
January 1, 2001:
September 8, 2001: many UNIX systems count days from an arbitrary beginning, and this date is day 999,999,999. HAL 9000 probably had problems on September 9, 2001…
February 29, 2004: the first leap-year day of the 21st century.
If you are running these tests on a Macintosh, you should be bored by now. If you don’t have a Macintosh, you probably want to check them out; they are available in several flavors.