• FuglyDuck
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    157 months ago

    my dad was a UNIX sysadmin. His assertion- at the time- that we’d be fine, did not live up the vast amounts of overtime he put in in during '99.

    (To be clear it was never the then-modern systems, like windows ME, or '95 that were at problem. it was all the old-as fuck stuff… every major institution still uses. Like IRS’s COBOL database… that’s… still being…used.all of that stuff, they needed to patch to make it okay.)

    • @TexasDrunk
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      187 months ago

      Just wait until 2038. More overtime!

      • FuglyDuck
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        7 months ago

        he just retired this year!

        (so… uh… what happens in 2038?) (edit… I’ll worry about 2038 if we actually get to 2030.)

        • @Serinus
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          227 months ago

          Unix time starts January 1st, 1970 and counts the number of seconds since then.

          Right now it is 1718265480 (approximately).

          That’s stored in a 32 bit signed integer. It hits max int in January of 2038.

          Unix timestamp gif of rolling over in 2038

        • @Archer
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          107 months ago

          UNIX epoch limit. Date goes back to 1970