Meet the Other Phone. Protection built in.

Meet the Other Phone.
Protection built in.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

The Millenium Bug

121 replies

mumofoneAloneandwell · 24/09/2025 08:50

Do you remember this?

I am listening to Radio 1 and they've just brought it up and it unlocked a memory 😅

Never panned out but I remember my dm being quite stressed about it (I was about 9)

https://www.sciencefocus.com/science/how-do-computers-get-bugs

Looking at the state of the world, I kind of understand the Y2K fears at times

How the ‘millennium bug’ cost the world £240bn: A short history of computer glitch disasters - BBC Science Focus Magazine

From coding to coffee spills, the real question is: how do computers <em>not</em> get bugs?

https://www.sciencefocus.com/science/how-do-computers-get-bugs

OP posts:
snowlaser · 24/09/2025 13:38

Bambamhoohoo · 24/09/2025 13:18

I wonder what they thought you would be able to do if something did happen??

I think in many cases having someone on hand who could just switch things off in the event of a problem would be better than nothing, even if they couldn't fix the issue.

BestIsWest · 24/09/2025 13:54

I agree @EBearhug, we had to be very inventive back in those days. It’s impossible to convey how expensive storage was and how every byte or bit counted. The maximum file size on our mainframe was 2gb. I worked on at least one system where the date was held as YDDD I.e the last digit of the year and the number of the day (001-365 or 366).
Another example is the use of bit patterns to indicate the meaning of the next field as record lengths were limited.

Hiddenmnetter · 24/09/2025 14:25

It is sort of mind blowing how powerful computers are now. I carry in my pocket a processor with more processing power, more storage and more memory, in the region of 100s of times more powerful, than the first computer I built back in the early 90s…it’s staggering. I remember saving my pocket money with my brother to afford an extra 8MB of RAM so we could play multiplayer duke nukem 🤣

Skybluepinky · 24/09/2025 15:06

It was a way for it company’s to make a fortune and it worked.

randomchap · 24/09/2025 15:12

Skybluepinky · 24/09/2025 15:06

It was a way for it company’s to make a fortune and it worked.

No it wasn't

CaptainMyCaptain · 24/09/2025 15:35

Skybluepinky · 24/09/2025 15:06

It was a way for it company’s to make a fortune and it worked.

Do you have much knowledge of the industry? Or spelling.

BestIsWest · 24/09/2025 15:38

Skybluepinky · 24/09/2025 15:06

It was a way for it company’s to make a fortune and it worked.

Go on then, explain how companies made a fortune. You’re clearly an expert.

Snorlaxo · 24/09/2025 15:40

I too worked on the preparation for this.

Nothing happened because billions was spent on preventing it, not because there wasn’t anything to be concerned about.

Muffsies · 24/09/2025 16:01

Skybluepinky · 24/09/2025 15:06

It was a way for it company’s to make a fortune and it worked.

Entirely wrong. The IT guys actually fixed it, the ones cashing-in were, as usual, the consultants.

I worked in an accountancy firm, and we had to ensure all of our clients had updated their various IT systems to ensure the going concern of their businesses. Be assured that if they didn't their systems would have crashed or malfunctioned causing losses, or even tank the business. We would go around installing the software updates for their accounting packages and operating systems (for a small fee). It was a fairly simple thing to do thanks to the software companies working round the clock to fix the bugs.

The guys who were "on the take" were the consultants (there to con & insult you) who made it all sound scary and complicated and charged their clients a fortune to fix their systems (probably paying their IT guys a fraction of the fees). After all, what would you think was reasonable to pay to protect you livelihood/life's work?

EBearhug · 24/09/2025 18:19

I remember saving my pocket money with my brother to afford an extra 8MB of RAM so we could play multiplayer duke nukem

Oh yes, requests with full business justification for an extra 1GB storage.

Antimimisti · 24/09/2025 18:28

I was in my 20s, we had the internet via modem at home and I worked daily with computers - I didn't worry about the Millennium Bug. I didn't expect anything to happen and if it had done, I'd have been more interested than scared.

Callipygion · 26/09/2025 11:29

I think our first home computer (an Acorn?) had 1MB memory!

(or it might even have been 1kb! Tiny anyway!)

GasPanic · 26/09/2025 11:55

I think like most of these things it was not at the extreme end of the scale, neither a complete con nor potentially a huge disaster that was successfully mitigated. People like to fall on one extreme end in their opinions though.

Somewhere in between those two points. I think a lot of people were massively overpaid for resolving it because of the fear and hype created. That said clearly some issues were prevented by taking pre-emptitive action.

I remember in the company I worked for the software department were doing some stuff on it, but it didn't take a huge amount of effort and when it did finally happen nothing much actually happened.

GasPanic · 26/09/2025 11:58

Callipygion · 26/09/2025 11:29

I think our first home computer (an Acorn?) had 1MB memory!

(or it might even have been 1kb! Tiny anyway!)

Edited

I actually had a 16k spectrum. With about 6K of that taken up by the screen, that had a whopping 10K to code games into. There was still some good stuff on it though like asteroids, and the 48K spectrum (which I upgraded to by putting in more memory ICs) had tons of great games.

No doubt someone will be talking about their ZX80 next.

Hiddenmnetter · 26/09/2025 21:33

EBearhug · 24/09/2025 18:19

I remember saving my pocket money with my brother to afford an extra 8MB of RAM so we could play multiplayer duke nukem

Oh yes, requests with full business justification for an extra 1GB storage.

Let’s be fair. Quake was about 8MB. 1GB was overkill! In my final year of school I managed to install quake on the year 12 computers, and setup a Quake server on the one in the corner. The school had locked down the floppy drive and usual access but left port 80 open so could FTP the files. Every lunch people would be playing quake and eating lunch. The year head got so exasperated he started fining people $1 each time he caught them, so people would come in and put their dollar on the PC for him to collect.

at the end of the year all the money he had collected was donated to the victims of a starving earthquake charity. I thought it was quite imaginative. Eventually the deputy headmaster threatened to suspend me if I didn’t show them how to stop me installing games…it’s a wonder they had an actual IT consultant they paid good money to run the school network.

jade1276 · 04/03/2026 19:20

Reading that thread really took me back to the Y2K panic stockpiling candles, worrying planes would fall from the sky, the lot! It’s funny how tech fears come in waves. These days, instead of fearing computers, we rely on them for everyday curiosities. I’ve been using an AI insect search by image tool after finding strange bugs in my garden, and it’s wild how far technology has come since the Millennium Bug days.

Free Bug Identification – Identify Any Insect by Picture

Identify any insect instantly with Bug Identification AI a free, smart tool that uses AI to recognize bugs by picture and reveal their species and details.

https://buganalyzr.com/

Createausername1970 · 04/03/2026 19:31

TeenToTwenties · 24/09/2025 11:10

People using computers weren't the people who needed to fix things. It was the software they ran on. Developers would have been issuing upgrades and stressing the need to install them etc.

Yes.

I worked for a small computer company in the the run up to Y2K, and we were indeed in contact with the hardware and software manufacturers and in turn passing on details about recommended upgrades to our end users.

Mindgoneblankagain · 04/03/2026 19:46

I was a member of the Y2K team in a civil service Department at the time. My role was liaison with other similar agencies to make sure we were all up to speed on what shared software had been sorted , and designing and running simulation training events for the various teams that would be manning "mission control" over the new year period. Given the nature of the work carried out by my organisation and its counterparts I was aware of the potential for some really catastrophic outcomes in the UK and globally should the problem not be sorted out. So no, it wasn't a con, nor was it just a way for IT consultancies to make a fast buck. It was a real threat which went away due to the hard work and diligence of a lot of people, and governments around the world taking it very seriously

BMW6 · 04/03/2026 20:08

I worked for HMRC in 1999/2000 and I was volunteered to go on a training day and be in the office no later than 6am to switch every single terminal on, do something (can't recall what) ready for Y2K

I think I was told to do it as I'm pretty capable and lived a 1 minute (yep) walk from our office block.

Serencwtch · 04/03/2026 20:37

I was working in a hospital in South London & we had to have every piece of electronic equipment checked & then stickered with 'Y2K checked' it was a huge task
I was a student at the time & it paid much better than other student jobs.

In the end I think only 3 pieces of equipment in the entire site had problems related to it & none were patient/staff equipment - I think one was a video player in a staff lounge. So all in all a good job done!

Antimimisti · 04/03/2026 20:45

GasPanic · 26/09/2025 11:58

I actually had a 16k spectrum. With about 6K of that taken up by the screen, that had a whopping 10K to code games into. There was still some good stuff on it though like asteroids, and the 48K spectrum (which I upgraded to by putting in more memory ICs) had tons of great games.

No doubt someone will be talking about their ZX80 next.

We had a ZX81! Obviously not in Y2k, we had whatever Windows machine was reasonably current at the time, and, of course, a modem.

I don't remember much panic about the millennium bug. We were assured at work there was nothing to be concerned about, and there wasn't.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page