General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: I don't know how many of you all remember late 1999. [View all]haele
(13,679 posts)Testing for Navy and Marine Corps communications, integration, and business applications software and firmware fixes associated with Y2K.
His unit validated about a quarter of comms software and firmware the Navy had. While planes wouldn't necessarily be falling out of the sky, the effects of not going through every system before Y2K could have meant digital communications and navigation systems locking up or "hallucinating" while trying to find proper date/time codes, wasted money, and delays of up to a year or more of administrative operations, repairs, logistics, and purchases while the DoD tried to fix after the failure. The commercial sector did the same thing. Digital firmware in communications, especially in aeronautics, UHF radio and SATCOM has been around since the late 50's; there were a lot of small things that could still have gone wrong because frankly, no one thought about Y2k and 2 digit annular codes until the mid/late 80's.
It wasn't a big deal because the government made a big stink and spent the time and money fixing the known problem beforehand instead of reacting to the massive failures afterwards.
Haele