@d8402a8b @60d98082
Alas, no.
It was one of those - ALL companies must respond with their certification statement about their products being compatible with Y2K.
I did a quick search - I can't seem to find an online source for that.
I will also note that Y2K problems started in 1995 or so - in credit card processing when the expiration date of the card was 2000 or later.
They continue to pop up in 2010, 2020 (y2k+20) where code worked around the problem instead of fixing it too.
@e7cebe76 @60d98082
i still don't believe that.
inspired by y2k, i made a y2026 (i think) bug in a lotus notes system i wrote.
when year is 2026 it would pop up a dialogue box expressing amazement that this code was still in use and that we had run out of letters of alphabet: A was year 2000 from memory.
i was told it was removed when i left.