Y2K Fever!
From the collection of
From the collection of
Preparing to face the dreaded 'Millenium Bug'.
In the late 90s, the buzzword for the new millennium was 'bug'. With computers already a central part of many people's lives, concern began to spread as the year 2000 approached that a disaster was coming. Many computers stored calendar data as two digits, rather than four, meaning at the stroke of midnight on New Year's Eve, dates would tick over not from 1999 to 2000, but from 99 to 00. It might seem minor, but it was a potentially costly risk to many industries.Most people were sanguine about the bug. Some said that its effects would be minimal. Others panicked and predicted a disaster of apocalyptic proportions. Once the year 2000 arrived, problems were generally very limited, thanks in part to a massive global effort to update computer systems.This report covers some of the more domestic concerns surrounding the bug. Action 2000 was an organisation set up to educate people about the bug. The report contains a detailed breakdown of potential issues that the bug could pose for household objects.
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The 1990s had a lot to live up to. At the tail end of the 1980s, the dissolution of the Soviet Union, thawing of Cold War tensions, and symbolic fall of the Berlin Wall gave the following decade the charge of a new era – or at least the end of an old one. Political scientist Francis Fukuyama went one further, declaring what he saw to be the definitive victory of liberal democracy to be 'the end of history' itself.
Rather than closing the book on history, though, the 1990s passed the baton between the centuries, seeding themes still relevant today across politics, technology, culture and society at large, from the blanket, up-to-the-minute coverage of the Gulf War, to a growing concern for the environment, to revolutions in science that transformed the food we eat.
In Westminster, almost two decades of Conservative rule gave way to the charismatic optimism of New Labour, which was buoyed by the pop cultural moment of “Cool Britannia” on screen, in galleries, and on the airwaves. Yet, even during this period of puffed-up national pride, the union itself was a topic of debate, with devolution processes underway in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland – where the historic Good Friday agreement to put an end to the Troubles was signed.
Elsewhere, the perfect marriage of consumerism and technology continued, as our lives became increasingly digital and connected. The boxy desktop PCs, snail’s-pace dial-up modems and Y2K ‘Millennium bug’ hysteria may now seem quaint, but they pointed towards our current, always-online era. History, as ever, marched on.