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#41
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In message , at 11:21:09 on Tue, 5
Jan 2016, Peter CS remarked: During a particularly wearisome Y2K fix job one of my team remarked that we'd better allow for 5-digit years or we'd have to do the whole thing again in 8000 years' time. Roll on 2038, or have they fixed that yet? -- Roland Perry |
#42
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In message , at 23:29:07 on Tue, 5 Jan 2016,
Mizter T remarked: The free travel ended at 0430 1st Jan and there weren't any reports of problems yesterday. That's a good point. I was expecting the free travel to have been all day on the 1st. Why? It's been 2345 NYE to 0430 NYD for years and years and years. With the railway day ending at 4.30am I'd expect that to be called a New Years Eve free travel period, not a NYD one. -- Roland Perry |
#44
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In message
-sept ember.org, at 23:52:54 on Mon, 4 Jan 2016, Recliner remarked: Y2K type bugs date from software designed 40 or more years ago Here's another I came across by chance today: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2012/03...day_confirmed/ -- Roland Perry |
#45
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Roland Perry wrote:
In message -sept ember.org, at 23:52:54 on Mon, 4 Jan 2016, Recliner remarked: Y2K type bugs date from software designed 40 or more years ago Here's another I came across by chance today: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2012/03...day_confirmed/ Wonderful! I'm pretty sure that even my distinctly amateurish code does date checks in a smarter way than that (just subtract a date from today and see if the answer is greater than 365 -- the system clock at least should know all about leap years). |
#46
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Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 23:29:07 on Tue, 5 Jan 2016, Mizter T remarked: The free travel ended at 0430 1st Jan and there weren't any reports of problems yesterday. That's a good point. I was expecting the free travel to have been all day on the 1st. Why? It's been 2345 NYE to 0430 NYD for years and years and years. With the railway day ending at 4.30am I'd expect that to be called a New Years Eve free travel period, not a NYD one. It was referred to as free travel on or for NYE by (for example) TfL, Metro, Evening Standard, Time Out, and the BBC - most media (as is the modern way) copying from TfL's Press Release. Where please did you see it called NYD free travel? -- Robin reply to address is (meant to be) valid |
#47
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In message , at 10:50:04 on Wed, 6 Jan 2016,
Robin remarked: Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 23:29:07 on Tue, 5 Jan 2016, Mizter T remarked: The free travel ended at 0430 1st Jan and there weren't any reports of problems yesterday. That's a good point. I was expecting the free travel to have been all day on the 1st. Why? It's been 2345 NYE to 0430 NYD for years and years and years. With the railway day ending at 4.30am I'd expect that to be called a New Years Eve free travel period, not a NYD one. It was referred to as free travel on or for NYE by (for example) TfL, Metro, Evening Standard, Time Out, and the BBC - most media (as is the modern way) copying from TfL's Press Release. Where please did you see it called NYD free travel? Recliner said: "there was also the normal New Year's free travel" OK, no "Eve" or "Day", but in my mind if defaults to the latter if not mentioned. -- Roland Perry |
#48
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On Wed, 6 Jan 2016 11:56:56 +0000, Roland Perry
wrote: In message , at 10:50:04 on Wed, 6 Jan 2016, Robin remarked: Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 23:29:07 on Tue, 5 Jan 2016, Mizter T remarked: The free travel ended at 0430 1st Jan and there weren't any reports of problems yesterday. That's a good point. I was expecting the free travel to have been all day on the 1st. Why? It's been 2345 NYE to 0430 NYD for years and years and years. With the railway day ending at 4.30am I'd expect that to be called a New Years Eve free travel period, not a NYD one. It was referred to as free travel on or for NYE by (for example) TfL, Metro, Evening Standard, Time Out, and the BBC - most media (as is the modern way) copying from TfL's Press Release. Where please did you see it called NYD free travel? Recliner said: "there was also the normal New Year's free travel" OK, no "Eve" or "Day", but in my mind if defaults to the latter if not mentioned. I did say "normal", meaning the same as in previous years, which have never given free travel all day on the 1st of January. I assumed people in u.t.l already knew that, and I didn't need to provide the full terms and conditions. |
#49
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In article , (Someone
Somewhere) wrote: On 05/01/2016 19:34, wrote: In article , d () wrote: In a back end system certainly. In a smartcard with perhaps only a few KB of RAM possibly not. The time when dates had to be so compressed passed before the advent of smartcards, believe me. Not true - when you are dealing with billions of transactions and/or millions of smart cards whose cost is proportionate to the storage on them there is still pressure to minimise the space that data occupies Not to that extent. They learnt something from Y2K. -- Colin Rosenstiel |
#50
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On 06/01/2016 15:01, wrote:
In article , (Someone Somewhere) wrote: On 05/01/2016 19:34, wrote: In article , d () wrote: The time when dates had to be so compressed passed before the advent of smartcards, believe me. Not true - when you are dealing with billions of transactions and/or millions of smart cards whose cost is proportionate to the storage on them there is still pressure to minimise the space that data occupies Not to that extent. They learnt something from Y2K. As it's panto season "oh no they didn't" |
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