Few woes mark computers' daylight shift
Software patches and other tweaks largely worked as planned
This weekend's early switch to daylight-saving time was billed as a little re-enactment of the Y2K computer problem at the turn of the millennium. And as it happened, the daylight bug appeared to have equally minor results.
Among the problems that were reported: Some customer-service call centers struggled to open at the proper hour. Calendar software inconsistently displayed meeting times.
But for the most part, the software patches and other tweaks applied by technology administrators worked as planned.
"It was not very serious, but a lot of work had been happening in the last weeks or two months to prepare for all this," said Julien Courbe, managing director of the financial services practice at BearingPoint Inc. a technology consultancy. "I think the work was comprehensive enough."
Courbe said his team at BearingPoint fixed the daylight-saving rules on 25,000 servers for its customers before the changeover and ended up with just a dozen "causing trouble." Usually those were in older programs, he said.
|
Most home PCs got the time patches sent automatically, but users without automatic updates who now sport erroneous clocks should visit their providers' Web sites (such as http://www.microsoft.com/dst2007). People with Windows 2000 machines or older ones need to make their fixes manually.
If corporate tech administrators had done nothing, computers programmed before the 2005 law would have kept standard time until April 1. Nothing dire was likely to happen, unlike the computer crashes feared when the Y2K bug made machines think 1999 had given way to 1900. Still, being an hour off could disrupt calendaring software and transaction processing.
Click for related content |
For example, some financial networks require that multiple machines coordinate, and an errant computer could screw it up. That's why the New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq Stock Market ran tests Sunday before pronouncing their systems fit for Monday's trading sessions.
But while the markets ticked on as usual, not everything was running correctly.
Don't miss this on MSNBC.com |
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
- Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM TECH AND GADGETS |
| Add Tech and gadgets headlines to your news reader: |


