Had 2 programs on my home NT PC die. The Windows based newsreader I used, Agent 1.5, wouldn't update the groups list after the first of the year. Went to Forte's site and they had an upgrade out there for it. I had heard 1.6 was buggy so I didn't ever upgrade. They had v1.7 out. I had heard that it was out but just didn't bother upgrading. They didn't specifically state that 1.5 wasn't Y2K ready but they DID mention that 1.7 was. I downloaded and installed the upgrade and all was well. Also an auto-dialer app didn't work. An upgrade at the vendor site fixed the problem. Here at the bank we didn't have any problems. Well, haven't yet anyway. There's still a lot of month-end, quarterly and annual processes that haven't run yet but I do believe that any problems we have may will be little ones. It'll just be catching them before they send someone a bill for a 100 years worth of interest on a loan or something like that. The management has been bragging about being Y2K ready for 18 months publicly but sweating bullets privately. There was a LOT of money spent on recoding COBOL apps and buying new LAN hardware and software over the last couple of years though. Guess it paid off. There was ine amusing Y2K story here. We have video monitors is a cafeteria with a feed from CNN that comes in to an NT server and are distributed through the enterprise from there. As hard as it is to believe, the box has a memory leak in it that requires a daily reboot. (I know. I've never heard of having to reboot an NT box either.) It is scheduled to reboot at midnight everynight when few are working. Well, there was a full contingent of people in working at the stroke of midnight on Jan 1st. Most were just sitting around and waiting for mainframes to explode or something. While they were waiting, they were in the cafeteria watching the New Year's festivities on TV. Well, guess what happens at the stroke of Y2K. The box that feeds CNN rebooted and all monitors in the place go black. You could have heard a pin drop in a room full of 150 people. Finally, the lady that maintains that box, remembered that the box reboots every night and everyone had a good chuckle. There were a few problems out there though. Most appear to be just displaying dates incorrectly. The following URL is a website of some screen captures of websites with initial problems. (Note the US Naval Observatory site right after midnight) http://go.to/y2kmistakes -----Original Message----- From: Ripcrd6 [mailto:ripcrd6@worldinter.net] Sent: Friday, January 07, 2000 10:42 AM To: kclug@kclug.org Subject: kclug - Y2K Glitches So, does anyone have any Y2K glitches to share? Any bugs you killed dead or that are in progress? I only ask out of curiosity. So far, the only one I have found is an old 486 that didn't roll over into the new year on its own. It went to 1980 and stayed that way for a day before someone noticed it. This PC was cobbled together from spare parts to run the UPS shipping software exclusively. So we shipped out a few packages that had 01/03/80 on the label. UPS says no problem. I say, thank god it wasn't something worse. All the other PCs that would have had this problem were phased out. Anyone else? Brian Y2K Flunky