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Date:      Thu, 20 Nov 1997 09:52:39 -0500 (EST)
From:      Jamie Bowden <jamie@itribe.net>
To:        James Raynard <james@jraynard.demon.co.uk>
Cc:        freebsd-chat@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Tell the world about Year 2000 Compliance
Message-ID:  <199711201453.JAA00792@gatekeeper.itribe.net>
In-Reply-To: <19971120001625.00506@jraynard.demon.co.uk>

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On Thu, 20 Nov 1997, James Raynard wrote:

> Although the problem isn't just a case of handling 1st January 2000
> correctly - there may be programs which (wrongly!) assume 2000 is not
> a leap year.  I vaguely remember hearing about some system which got
> past 1st Jan and 29th Feb 2000, only to miss out a day in the middle
> of March (OK, I think that one was a hardware bug).

Why is it wrong to assume 2000 isn't a leap year?  Last time I checked,
years ending in three 0's were not leap years by definition.

Jamie Bowden
Systems Administrator, iTRiBE.net

If we've got to fight over grep, sign me up.  But boggle can go.

	-Ted Faber (on Hasbro's request for removal of /usr/games/boggle)




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