[Search for users] [Overall Top Noters] [List of all Conferences] [Download this site]

Conference 7.286::dcu

Title:DCU
Notice:1996 BoD Election results in 1004
Moderator:CPEEDY::BRADLEY
Created:Sat Feb 07 1987
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1041
Total number of notes:18759

990.0. "DCU and the year 2000" by STARCH::WHALEN (Rich Whalen) Thu Apr 25 1996 20:39

    This evening, after talking to an information center employee about an
    account issue, I asked if the DCU was examining its software for
    potential problems occuring when the year changes to 2000.  I said that
    I didn't expect that she would be able to give me an answer quickly. 
    After explaining the potential for problems I was given the answer of
    "that's a long way away, so there is no need to worry about it yet."  I
    informed the person I was talking to that many firms that deal with
    money have already started to look into the problem as it is expected
    to require quite a bit of programming work to deal with the problem. 
    She told me that she would relay the concern to her manager, which
    satisfied my request - making sure that DCU management is aware of the
    problem and that its owners/depositors are also aware of it and need to
    be assured that things will work correctly.
    
    Rich
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
990.1don't worry, be happyHYLNDR::BADGERCan DO!Fri Apr 26 1996 09:105
    reminds me of check 9000 problem and DCU's ability to look ahead.
    I've been hearing estimates of 40-100Billion to fix the date issue.
    I hope that DEC learnt after their date75 problem.  I doubt it.
    ed
    
990.2STRWRS::KOCH_PIt never hurts to ask...Fri Apr 26 1996 09:593
    
    No, I've seen estimates now that this Year 2000 problem with cost
    upwards of 600 Billion to fix!
990.3BULEAN::BANKSFri Apr 26 1996 10:417
.1:

Was DCU even around for Date75?

Anyway, DCU ain't DEC.  And, as far as DEC is concerned, Date75 never
happened, 'cause it happened on an architecture that's politically
incorrect.
990.4STAR::PARKETrue Engineers Combat ObfuscationFri Apr 26 1996 12:008
    Gee, VMS V1.0 supported the year 2000 correctly. (No Date75
    here).
    
    Now applications, includeing those we may have written,
    Shudder.
    
    Bill
    
990.5HYLNDR::BADGERCan DO!Fri Apr 26 1996 13:027
    re .3, may be politically incorrect, but tops-10/20 is/was far more
    anvanced and suer friendly than VMS will ever be.  I won't even speak
    of UNIX.
    didn't we see every phoo phoo date75 and ignor it until too late.
    too bad we can't learn from history.
    ed
    
990.6ROWLET::AINSLEYDCU Board of Directors CandidateFri Apr 26 1996 15:146
    What was the date75 problem?  I'm assuming it was of the date-overflow
    variety, but what hardware/OS did it affect?
    
    Thanks,
    
    Bob
990.7BULEAN::BANKSFri Apr 26 1996 15:5715
Tops-10 used to use a 12 bit creation date field on its file system that
more or less represented the number of days since 1964.  (More or less
because it assumed all months had 31 days.)  It was going to overflow on
January 5, 1975.  The TOPS-10 engineers managed to find three more bits in
the retrieval information block in which to extend the date field -- in a
place that was neither convenient nor contiguous with the other 12.  In
fact, the place that was chosen was almost certainly likely to get
obliterated if you got any open/rename/create (well, "enter") error,
meaning that programs that weren't defensively coded were liable to end up
with dates off by a decade or two.  Other programs simply had to be updated
to acknowledge the existence of the other three bits if they ever wanted to
say anything about the creation date.

Given all that, from a customer perspective, the Date75 update went pretty
smoothly, given all the sweating and recoding done in advance.
990.8ROWLET::AINSLEYDCU Board of Directors CandidateMon Apr 29 1996 10:208
    re: .7
    
    That split, non-contiguous field stuff sounds sort of like some of the
    stuff I remember from RSTS.
    
    Thanks,
    
    Bob
990.9now there's a concept!LGP30::FLEISCHERwithout vision the people perish (DTN 227-3978, TAY1)Mon Apr 29 1996 18:024
re Note 990.5 by HYLNDR::BADGER:

>     anvanced and suer friendly than VMS will ever be.  I won't even speak
                   ^^^^