home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- WHEN IBM FIRST INTRODUCED THE 'XT' PERSONAL COMPUTER, EVERY TIME IT
- BOOTED THE DATE AND TIME HAD TO BE ENTERED MANUALLY
-
- A FEW YEARS LATER IBM PRODUCED THE 'AT' WHICH CONTAINED A BATTERY
- BACKED UP 'REAL TIME CLOCK' (RTC) CHIP WHICH STORED THE DATE AND TIME,
- EVEN WHEN THE PC WAS SWITCHED OFF. THIS SITUATION HAS NOT CHANGED AND PCS
- NOW CONTAIN TWO CLOCKS; THE DOS CLOCK AND THE REAL TIME CLOCK
-
- THE MILLENNIUM BUG PROBLEM IS CAUSED BY THE FACT THAT THE RTC HAS TWO
- SEPARATE SECTIONS TO STORE THE DATE, ONE CONTAINING THE CENTURY, THE OTHER
- THE YEAR. THE YEAR SECTION (97, 98 ETC.) ALWAYS ROLLS-OVER ON ITS OWN.
- BUT THE CENTURY SECTION (19.., 20..) USUALLY DOES NOT. THEREFORE WHEN YOU
- RUN 'VIEWER', YOU WILL PROBABLY SEE 1999 CHaNGE TO 1900, BECAUASE THE 99
- WENT TO 00, BUT THE 19 STAYED AT 19.
-
- SOME MANUFACTURERS CALL THEIR MACHINES COMPLIANT EVEN WITH THIS PROBLEM
- IN THEIR REAL TIME CLOCK. IN THOSE MACHINES, THE BIOS (BASIC INPUT/OUTPUT
- SYSTEM) DISK INFERS FROM THE INCORRECT DATE O 1900 THAT THE RTC MUST MEAN
- 2000, AND PASSES THAT DATE ON TO THE OPERATING SYSTEM. WHETHER THAT IS
- TRULY COMPLIANT IS HIGHLY DEBATABLE, SINCE THERE IS THE OPPORTUNITY FOR
- SOME PROGRAMS TO GET A DATE WHICH IS INCORRECT BY 1000 YEARS.
-
-
-
-
-