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Time Change to Bring Computer Glitches

Gentle Ben

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Jan 5, 2002
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http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory?id=2872375&page=1


By BRIAN BERGSTEIN AP Technology Writer

Feb 13, 2007 (AP)— For three weeks this March and April, Microsoft Corp. warns that users of its calendar programs "should view any appointments … as suspect until they communicate with all meeting invitees." Wow, that's sort of jarring is something treacherous afoot?

Actually, it's a potential problem in any software that was programmed before a 2005 law decreed that daylight-saving time would start three weeks earlier and end one week later, beginning this year. Congress decided that more early evening daylight would translate into energy savings.

Software created earlier is set to automatically advance its timekeeping by one hour on the first Sunday in April, not the second Sunday in March (that's March 11 this year).

The result is a glitch reminiscent of the Y2K bug, when cataclysmic crashes were feared if computers interpreted the year 2000 as 1900 and couldn't reconcile time appearing to move backward. This bug is much less threatening, but it could cause head-scratching episodes when some computers are an hour off.

The problem won't show up only in computers, of course. It will affect plenty of non-networked devices that store the time and automatically adjust for daylight saving, like some digital watches and clocks. But in those instances the result will be a nuisance (adjust the time manually or wait three weeks) rather than something that might throw a wrench in the works.

Cameron Haight, a Gartner Inc. analyst who has studied the potential effects of the daylight-saving bug, said it might force transactions occurring within one hour of midnight to be recorded on the wrong day. Computers might serve up erroneous information about multinational teleconference times and physical-world appointments.

"Organizations could face significant losses if they are not prepared," the Information Technology Association of America cautioned this week.

Dave Thewlis, who directs CalConnect, a consortium that develops technology standards for calendar and scheduling software, said it is hard to know how widespread the problem will be.


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The Bandit

Lap Dance Survivor
Feb 16, 2002
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So we have to change something manually, big deal...we just get too used to things being done for us automatically.

Just mark it on the calendar.
 
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SynFolly

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Mar 7, 2006
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It is a big deal

It is a pain, because it starts weeks earlier and ends weeks later so it screws you up 2 times. If you have a messaging system like M$ Xchange it causes havoc. One thing is some people are not aware and the other thing is the patches to the system become painful, you have to run a tool after you patch exchange to move calendar items, but, if they entered the appointment from a computer that was already patched, the date is set correctly so the tool could screw up the appointment. (this is headach in large corporations, 1000's of users, and many don't pay attention to IT information)

Thank you Mr Bush for More unwanted Overtime in IT
If they wanted to make our lives easy, just get rid of DST period or move us to always be on DST, the change is more disruptive then useful.

My $0.02
 
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