Y2K non-event was RE: Write only programming

From: Lawrence Walker <lgwalker_at_mts.net>
Date: Sat Mar 2 14:58:02 2002

 Or cynical marketers. It did provide a boost to the economy for some. I'm
still waiting for all the people who bought gas generators to grow tired of
having them kicking around in the garage or basement and to start flooding
the resale market. I wish someone had come up with a general fix for the
programs like Sidekick or Lotus Organiser that don't work now. Not enough
money in it. The Chicken Littles who made big bucks popularising the scam
should be sentence to hard labor providing fixes.

Lawrence

> On Fri, 1 Mar 2002, Douglas Quebbeman wrote:
>
> > > I don't think anything he says (or has ever said) has much relevance
> > > anymore.
> >
> > No, like Brooks, he made points about the development of large-scale
> > projects which remain valid. Yourdon certainly wasn't alone in the
> > Y2K chiken-little mentality... and I don't feel inclined to consign
> > them, lock, stock, and barrel, to perdition, not quite yet, anyway...
>
> Look, as far as I'm concerned, anyone who thought the world would end
> after the clocks turned to the year 2000 are idiots and deserve to be
> ignored.
>
> Sellam Ismail Vintage Computer Festival
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> International Man of Intrigue and Danger http://www.vintage.org
>
> * Old computing resources for business and academia at www.VintageTech.com *
>


Reply to: lgwalker_at_mts.net

Love of the Goddess makes the poet go mad
he goes to his death and in death is made wise.
Robert Graves
Received on Sat Mar 02 2002 - 14:58:02 GMT

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