Tuesday, September 8, 2009

090909 Critical and Significant Dates / Wednesday



Fernando IX University



Critical and Significant Dates
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Critical Dates




The major criticalities are, sequentially,
the August 1999 GPS rollover,
the Year 2000
and all its two-digit rollover consequences,
the Leapness of 2000 (including Day 366),
and the 32-bit UNIX (and C library) Year 2038 problem;
and also the various dates relating to introduction of the
Euro currency.




There are or have been other critical date lists at Cinderella
"Timeline", at Volker Kolberg's site, in Capers Jones's "Dangerous
Dates" page, etc., etc. My more general Year
2000
and Date/Time references are now on
other pages.
Excerpts on
Computer Calendar-Clock Problems
by Peter G. Neumann (2000) is
instructive.




Much of the following was picked up from the
comp Y2k, UK Y2k
and Risks
(Risks Digest)
Usenet newsgroups and from a Y2k FAQ, with the aid of
the Calendar FAQ;
also doncio
and other Web pages such as at Mitre.




When I receive E-mail information correcting or extending the list,
I will assume permission to quote.




Links like _ are not intended for general
use.







The List of Dates




This is, fundamentally, a list of Critical and Significant Dates,
which is not quite the same thing as a list of dates which
ought to be used in testing; for example, 2000-02-29 was critical as
possibly unexpected, but in testing one should also try 2000-02-28,
2000-02-30, 2000-02-31, 2000-03-00 and 2000-03-01, in order to make sure
that the valid dates are consecutive and without overlap (Note 19); likewise for 2000-366. Some of the dates are
those resulting from other date failures.




Some are important; some are possibly just amusing - it is up to
you to discriminate.




This List is not a prediction of disaster; it is an indication of
when error may be prevented by sufficient care.




Software errors may have been fixed in later versions.




The Gregorian calendar, with Historical year numbering, is to be
assumed where necessary (some dates are UNCHECKED - you MUST verify -
they may be a day or two out). However, many of the critical dates would
be the same dates (which currently occur thirteen days later) in a
consistently Julian environment. Note that, in computing, conventional
day-numbers preceding 1900-03-01 and day-counts spanning 1900-02-28 to
1900-03-01 might be a day out, if a day in between those dates was
assumed.




The more Critical Dates may have been chosen as trigger dates by
virus writers - 2000-01-01, 2000-02-29, 2001-02-29, etc. - and may
emulate date errors.




Some dates of non-computer origin are included. Historical dates are
mainly limited to those of significance to UK history and culture.




For near-present Space dates, see
Ron Baalke.




Virus trigger dates are NOT included - use a virus checker such as
F-Prot (see PC Links Reference) and
others.




Abbreviations should be obvious enough to those for whom they are
significant.






2006-08-01 - New Warning




In general, I have mainly considered
events relating to counting UP to particular numbers. There are also
events relating counting DOWN; and those are less well predicted.




See 2006-05-13 and 2008-01-19 below as examples.







The Dates Themselves






Date Formats




To simplify use of my DoW checker :-

• Julian dates are given as YYYY/MM/DD.

• Only Gregorian AD dates are
ISO 8601
hyphen-separated : otherwise spaces are used.






Timing of Events




Some of these are local date/times; some are GMT/UTC or similar. I use GMT for legal GMT,
with date changing at London mean solar midnight; the term UT might be
confused with UTC.




It is very important to remember that the local
time corresponding to a given GMT depends on the local
Time Zone,
and on Daylight saving; also that the time in question will be the time
that the system is actually set to, not what it should be set to.




For example, a DOS/Windows PC will with high probability be set to
local time internally, but a UNIX computer should be on GMT/UTC
internally. DOS software translated from UNIX may default to California
time settings.




Leap seconds may affect some dates,
e.g. GPS rollover 1999, UNIX 2038.




The form a^b is used for "a to the power b" =
ab. The form mEe is used for
m×10e.




N.B. Two aspects of the year before AD 0001 are presented below,
as BC 0001 and as ±0000 Astronomical.






B.C.






  • 1.37E+10 years - The Big Bang, approximately

  • 4.567E+9 years - Solar System formed

  • 5509/09/01 Sat - Byzantine Empire,
    Creation and year-count start (Authors vary in detail; Julian?)

  • 4714 11 24 Mon - (Gregorian)
    Julian Day 0 started at noon GMT, 24th Nov 4714 BC, Proleptic
    Gregorian Calendar

  • 4713/01/01 Mon - (Julian) Start of First Julian Period

  • 4713/01/01 Mon - (Julian)
    Julian Day 0 started at noon GMT, 1st Jan 4713 BC, Proleptic
    Julian Calendar.

    Historians seem to treat it as starting at 0000h local -
    Chronological Julian Date, CJD

  • 4236 -- -- --- - Alleged start of Egyptian Calendar -
    first recorded year in history. Note 21.1, 21.2


  • 4004/10/22 Sat - (Julian) The Creation of the World,
    at six in the evening,
    according to Archbishop James Ussher of Armagh (1581-1656) - see
    Note 22

  • 4004/10/23 Sun - (Julian) The First Complete Day


  • 3761/10/07 Mon - (Julian) Anno Mundi 1,
    the origin of the Jewish Calendar, starting at the previous sunset.
    Sources may differ in detail : Note 20


  • 3374/11/11 Mon - (Julian) And

  • 3114/09/06 Mon - (Julian) And

  • 3114/09/08 Wed - (Julian) Possible start of current Mayan
    Great Cycle (Long Count) (see AD 2012-12-23).
    Note 21.1, 21.2, 21.4

  • 2637 -- -- --- - Legend: Emperor Huangdi invented the
    Chinese Calendar. Note 21.1, 21.2

  • 1976/11/08 Wed - (Julian) CJD 1E6 (approximately)

  • 0776 -- -- --- - Base of "Olympiad" dating - the first Games

  • 0753 -- -- --- -
    The Founding of the City - base for Roman a.u.c. dates (March 1st)

  • 0432 -- -- --- - Beginning of the First Metonic Cycle

  • 0046 -- -- --- - (Roman) The "Year of Confusion", 445
    days long; Julian Calendar decreed;

  • 0045/01/01 Fri - (Julian) Julian Calendar began;
    but Leap Years were implemented wrongly
    (Calendar FAQ, S.2.1.1) before 8 AD (some say 4 AD)






  • 0001/02/29 --- - (Julian) did not occur; as for AD 0004

  • 0001/03/25 Tue - (Julian) The Day of the
    Incarnation/Annunciation, according to Dionysius Exiguus.
    Other Days follow naturally

  • 0001/12/31 Fri - (Julian) B.C. ended with this day,
    the 365th of the year.





0000






  • 0000 -- -- --- - Year number did
    not occur
    , except for Astronomers; like 4 AD, it was not Leap ;
    defective software may erroneously return some form like
    0000-00-00, 0000-01-01, 0001-00-00, 0001-01-00, etc.

  • 0000/01/01 Thu - (Astronomical Proleptic Julian)

  • 0000-01-01 Sat - (Astronomical Proleptic Gregorian)

  • 0000 02 29 --- - (Civil) did not occur; as AD 0004

  • 0000/03/01 Wed - My preferred
    (Astronomical Proleptic Gregorian)
    Day Zero for calculation (except when I prefer to use CMJD).





A.D.






  • 0001 -- -- --- - Fourth year of the 194th Olympiad

  • 0001/01/01 Sat - (Julian) Start of A.D.; CMJD -678577

  • 0001 01 01 Sun -
    (Civil) Start of A.D.; CMJD -678576; DCCLIIII AUC; 3761 A.M

  • 0001-01-01 Mon - (Gregorian) Start of A.D.; CMJD -678575.

    TTimeStamp Day 0/1 (Win9x).

    TDateTime Day 1 (Delphi 1.0).

    R.D. Day 1

    Paradox Day 1 ?

  • 0004 02 29 --- - (Civil) Not valid. 4 AD was *NOT* Leap
    (UNIX is wrong); earlier, Roman priests couldn't count correctly,
    and were still compensating here. Only general AD exception to
    4, 4/100/400 year rules (apart from "AD 0", also not Leap)


  • 0033-04-01 Fri - (Good Friday, Gregorian) Lunar Eclipse,
    Jerusalem


  • 0033/04/03 Fri - (Good Friday, Julian) Lunar Eclipse,
    Jerusalem


  • 0100-01-01 --- - Earliest date that can be
    directly input in systems where YY is mapped into YYYY

  • 0100-01-01 Fri - (Gregorian) Earliest date value for
    Microsoft Jet database engine, VBScript, etc.


  • 0200-03-01 Sat - Julian and Gregorian Calendar agreement starts

  • 0284-08-28 Thu - (Gregorian; 6pm)
    Anno Diocletian 1 (ADio 248 ~ ADom 532)

  • 0300-02-28 Wed - Julian and Gregorian Calendar agreement ends


  • 0312 -- -- --- - Start of First
    Indiction,
    day varies


  • 0325 -- -- --- - May-July,
    Council of Nicaea, Easter date rule


  • 0622/07/16 Fri - (Julian) First Day of the Islamic Calendar,
    MuHarram 1, 1 A.H. (0622-07-19 Fri Gregorian), starts at previous sunset.
    Beginning of the year (month?) of the Hejira on the existing calendar.
    Astronomers may prefer the day before.
    Note 21.2?


  • 0888-08-28 --- - All digits even, last before
    2000-02-02; cf. 1999-11-19, 3111-11-11

  • 1000-??-?? ??? - Y1k; Vikings discovered America? :-(

  • 1001-01-10 --- - Doubly palindromic as DDMMYYYY

  • 1001-10-01 --- - Doubly palindromic as YYYYMMDD

  • 1111-11-11 --- - Doubly palindromic

  • 1221-12-21 --- - Doubly palindromic as YYYYMMDD

  • 1380-08-31 --- - Last palindromic YYYYMMDD date until 2001


  • 1582/02/24 Sat - (Julian) Gregorian Calendar decreed;
    for use from October, changes in Leap Year
    & Easter rules

  • 1582 10 05 to 14 - (Civil) These 10 dates were
    skipped in Rome (at JD 2299160.5?), etc.

  • 1582-10-15 Fri - (Gregorian) Lilian Day 1


  • 1600/01/01 Tue - (Julian) Year began to begin on Jan 1, in
    Scotland (rest of Britain, see 1752 link)

  • 1601-01-01 Mon - (Gregorian) ANSI COBOL 85 Day 1.
    Quattro Pro first day.
    Base filedate for Windows "Last Modified", etc. (64-bits of 100 ns)?
    MJD -94187

  • 1605/11/05 Tue - (Julian) Guy Fawkes arrested previous evening

  • 1700/02/29 Thu - A valid
    date
    , though only in still-Julian places;
    e.g. Great Britain and possessions

  • 1710 10 02 to 1710 10 13 -
    Nova Scotia (Canada) had these civil dates twice

  • 1712 02 30 Fri - Occurred in Sweden
    (and so, it seems, in Finland)

  • 1751/01/01 to 1751/03/24 - Because of the change in the
    starting day of the year, these dates (which would have followed
    1751-12-31) were never used in the English Civil Calendar

  • 1752 09 03 to 13 - (Civil) These 11 dates were
    skipped in the British Empire

  • 1753-04-05 Thu - Start of UK FY 1753-54, moved from
    traditional Lady Day (Mar 25) because of calendar change above
    (but see Date Miscellany II)

  • 1800-04-06 Sun - Start of UK FY 1800-01, a day later due
    to missing Feb 29 (ditto)

  • 1805-10-11 Fri - Decreed that the RN day would in future
    start at local midnight - was the previous local noon -
    ships must have had a Long Day. Not implemented at Trafalgar

  • 1841-01-01 Fri - Day 1 for ANSI MUMPS $Horolog function.


  • 1852-02-29 Sun - Fred born.
    Possibly Fri, 4 years later


  • 1858/11/05 Wed - GMT : MJD 0 by the Julian Calendar

  • 1858-11-17 Wed - GMT : MJD 0
    ; JD 2400000.5 ; JD 2400001 starts at noon UTC;
    CJD 2400001.
    Base date/time for DEC
    OpenVMS
    (VAX VMS), TOPS. See 0000-03-01 & Note 0


  • 1867/10/06 Fri - Julian, CMJD 3257

  • 1867 10 !! --- - Probable position of Alaskan date
    hiccup; the previous and following
    entries were consecutive local days

  • 1867-10-18 Fri - Gregorian, CMJD 3257


  • 1878-09-05 Thu - TJD -32768 : least 16-bit signed TJD


  • 1880-08-02 Mon - Royal Assent to UK "Statutes (Definition
    of Time) Act", making GMT the legal time in Great Britain


  • 1884-10-01 Wed - Start of
    International Meridian Conference, Washington, DC, USA.

    Prime Meridian to be Greenwich, Greenwich Mean Time adopted, etc.

  • 1884-11-01 Sat - End of Conference


  • 1899-12-30 Sat - Borland Delphi 2.0+
    base date (Day 0) for TDateTime double
    (D1 used Day 1 = AD 0001-01-01 Gregorian); CMJD 15018.
    Also for other systems without the anomalous retrospective 1900-02-29,
    e.g. VBScript

  • 1899-12-31 Sun - ICL George 3 (etc.) Day 0


  • 1900-01-00 Sun - Excel 97 SP-1, Day 0

  • 1900-01-01 Mon - 00:00:00 GMT, IBM mainframe common time
    zero; tick is 2^n µs

  • 1900-01-01 Mon - At 00:00:00 GMT,
    NTP time zero (a seconds count;
    no leap seconds; 1900-02-29 omitted [2000-01-01 = Day 36524])


  • 1900-02-28 Wed - CMJD 15078. Was followed by March 1st

  • 1900 02 29 --- - Non-existent Leap Day, except in Lotus
    1-2-3 and compatible systems (Excel 97 SR-1 Day 60, ...), and in still-Julian
    countries; and possibly in G&S.
    See 1899-12-30, and Leap Years

  • 1900-03-01 Thu - Gregorian : CMJD 15079. Followed February 28th


  • 1900/02/29 Tue - Julian Leap Day, CMJD 15091, Gregorian
    1900-03-13 Tue. See in Leap Years


  • 1901-01-01 Tue - Ada: type TIME defines years
    as being in the range 1901..2099


  • 1901-12-13 Fri - 20:45:52 is where UNIX should go to
    from 2038-01-19; but I have read that systems can show Mon Jan -17 1902,
    -03:-14:-08 or 17:00:00

  • 1904-01-01 Fri - Start of old Apple Mac time
    - Excel Day 0, Seconds 0 - see 2040

  • 1925-01-01 Thu - The
    Astronomical GMT day now starts at
    midnight - had been the following noon - implying a Short Day yesterday

  • 1927-05-18 Wed - 10000 days from 1899-12-30

  • 1940-02-29 Thu -
    Fred's 21st Birthday :-)

  • 1948-08-05 Thu - CMJD 2^15


  • 1956-08-01 Wed - August 1, 1956 is the day that Apple restarts
    at when the battery dies, I was told. But

  • 1956-08-27 Mon - About 20:36 is the time that Apple restarts at
    when the battery dies, reported observations


  • 1958-01-01 Wed - CCSDS
    date/time code start (0h TAI) - spacecraft data


  • 1960-01-01 Fri - Alleged to be an IBM 360 epoch? What
    counting? Start of SAS daycount


  • 1967-12-31 Sun - Probable Day 0 of Pick

  • 1968-01-01 Mon - Sun SPARC: SunOS, Solaris, BSD/OS, Linux:
    in RTC, YYMMDD=000101

  • 1968-01-19 Fri - would be 2^31 seconds from 1900-01-01,
    incl. 1900-02-29. NTP MSB set.


  • 1968-01-20 Sat - 2^31 seconds from 1900-01-01,
    excl. 1900-02-29. NTP MSB set

  • 1968-05-24 Fri - Epoch of TJD, first TJD=0.
    NIST says TJD = MJD mod 10000. CCSDS says 4-digit TJD = MJD - 40000

  • 1969-12-31 Wed - Displayed in the New World for a zero-value
    UNIX time_t, JavaScript (etc.?) date; see 1970

  • 1969-12-31 Wed - Perl, etc., time failure result (23:59:59);
    "-1 seconds" - Note 11

  • 1969-12-31 Wed - IBM 360 date failure, reported at
    Mitre


  • 1970-01-01 Thu - MJD 40587. Delphi, etc., 25569.
    Base Date for UNIX, time_t,
    JavaScript (& Java), Perl and some implementations of C - GMT,
    so seemingly yesterday in the New World. Seconds/ms counts start


  • 1970-01-01 Thu - A common Microsoft date-windowing breakpoint

  • 1970-01-01 Thu - "Y2k"-class problem
    from one-digit years was observed

  • 1971-02-15 Mon - Decimal-Day, U.K. coinage - end of £.s.d

  • 1971-05-11 Tue - IBM 370 TOD clock flipped its top bit
    @11:56:53.685248 GMT. 1900-01-01 + 2^51 µs

  • 1972-01-01 Sat - Formal start of UTC time scale and
    Leap Seconds

  • 1972-01-19 Wed - 03:14:08, Mac system clock MSB flip

  • 1972-02-29 Tue - First leap year for IBM's TSO
    (Time Sharing Option); login message gave date as March 0, 1972.


  • 1972-06-30 Fri - 23:59:60 UTC,
    the First Leap Second of all

  • 1972-08-16 Wed - 9999 days to year 2000.
    Problem with tape retention -
    mainframe JCL parameter LABEL=RETPD=9999 "save forever" hits Y2k

  • 1973-03-03 Sat - UNIX time_t 100 Ms from 1970,
    at 09:46:40 GMT. 99,999,999 special? See 2001-09-09

  • 1975-01-05 Sun - PDP-6 12-bit days overflowed (DECsystem-10)

  • 1975-04-06 Sun - Day 96 of some year, probably '75/'76.
    PDP-11 DOS/BATCH used (sic) 12-bit dates,
    (year-base)×1000 + day_in_year (BE)


  • 1978-01-01 Sun - Earliest possible
    Amiga system date


  • 1978-01-01 Sun - PDP-8 OS/8 3-bit years (from '70)
    overflowed; fixed later in the year

  • 1978-07-04 Tue - UNIX time_t $10000000 at 21:24:16 UTC

  • 1979-12-01 Sat - Mainframes,
    string "000197AF" problem manifested (Cory H.)

  • 1980-00-00 --- - (sic) Earliest possible MS-DOS file date

  • 1980-01-01 Tue - Earliest valid MS-DOS file date.
    Earliest possible MS-DOS system date; DayCount=0

  • 1980-01-01 Tue - The "x'000197AF' for x'0001980F'" year began

  • 1980-01-04 Fri - Many older DOS PCs will
    reset to here or hereabouts
    when RTC year=00 is found (and for other RTC format errors)

  • 1980-01-06 Sun - Start of first
    GPS Week 0, at 00:00:00 UTC

  • 1980-12-31 Wed - IBM comms controller "Day 366" failure;
    cf. 1996

  • 1982-10-15 Fri - Gregorian calendar 400-year full repeat began

  • 1987 -- -- --- - US DST rule change

  • 1987-01-01 Thu - Burroughs Unisys A Series system date -
    Note 5

  • 1987-01-05 Mon - UNIX time_t $20000000 at 18:48:32 UTC

  • 1988-01-01 Fri - Sun leap year bugs :
    Risks Digest 6.05/1, 6.09/3,
    6.10/5, 6/11, 6.14/3


  • 1989-09-17 Sun - See 2079-06-05; Delphi Day 2^15

  • 1989-09-18 Mon - 2^15 days from 1900-01-01 - 16th bit flipped

  • 1989-11-16 Thu - 2^15 days from 1900-03-01 - 16th bit flipped
    (MTS failed)


  • 1991-01-01 Tue - Steltor's
    CorporateTime server's UNIAPI_TIME value zero at 0h GMT - minute count.
    Oracle bought Steltor

  • 1991-11-24 Sun - IBM: see 1997-12-##

  • 1992-01-01 Wed - Certain Olivetti PCs' calendars failed
    (3-bit years from '84?); also AT&T 6300s

  • 1992-11-01 Sun - Tandem CLX microcode bug struck at 3pm local -
    Risks Digest 14.06/7

  • 1995-07-09 Sun - UNIX time_t $30000000 at 16:12:48 UTC

  • 1995-10-10 Tue - CMJD 50000 {VS=10}.
    Second TJD 0 (or TJD 10000)

  • 1996-01-01 Mon - UNISYS mainframe 8-bit clock rollover

  • 1996-01-01 Mon - MS-DOS CHKDSK /F, FILE*.CHK date bug
    appeared - (Year-1980) is 4 bits? (seen by me in DOS 3.30, 5.00, 6.20;
    also reported in 6.22) (SCANDISK seems OK)

  • 1996-02-29 Thu - Penultimate Leap Day of the Second Millennium

  • 1996-12-31 Tue - 1996-366 - Tiwai Point (NZ) smelter failure.
    Also "Iceberg" storage array failure


  • 1997-01-08 Wed - Unisys CTOS application problem, reported as -

    "OFIS Spreadsheet fails to load on every Wednesday & Sunday.
    OFIS Spreadsheet v2 has problems calculating the day of week
    from this date (workaround released)."
    For FAQ, see 2041

  • 1997-04-07 Mon - 999 days to year 2000

  • 1997-05-19 Mon - 10000 days from 1970-01-01 - some OpenVMS
    dating may have failed unless an ECO was applied

  • 1997-11-02 Sun - Alleged in Y2k news : "HP's old computers
    are scheduled to roll over and die @ 1400gmt Nov. 4, 1997?".
    Used for FAA ATC - Note 1. Actually Nov 2nd

  • 1997-12-## ??? - Reported: Possible IBM mainframe minute
    clock 24-bit rollover about then. But 1960-01-01 + 2^24 minutes is
    1991-11-24 Sun 20:16.




  • 1998 -- -- --- - Year "98" may have been a "signal"

  • 1998-02-08 Sun -
    approx : 100 weeks to Y2k; a failure has been reported

  • 1998-04-06 Mon - UK FY 1998-1999 started - no problem?

  • 1998-07-06 Mon - Possibly "9876" might be a "signal" entry?

  • 1998-08-19 Wed - 500 days to Y2k - Y2k Awareness Day campaign:
    proposed South African "National Awareness Day", "Y2k for Africa Day",
    and "World Y2k Awareness Day"

  • 1998-09-09 Wed - Sometimes a "signal" date -
    cf. 1999-09-09

  • 1998-10-01 Thu - 15-month lookahead (seemingly common)
    began to fail

  • 1998-10-25 Sun - End of Summer Time,
    clocks went back

  • 1998-10-26 Mon - Hubble Space Telescope 32-bit clock
    MSB set at 20:42:15 UTC; systems had been checked for signed usage
    (RB: 1998-10-25). One system affected (RB: 28th)

  • 1998-12-01 Tue - One month look-ahead to "signal" year

  • 1998-12-31 Thu - Last day before "signal" year





  • 1999 -
    some 1999 dates may have equivalents in 1998.






  • 1999 -- -- --- - Year "99" (or "999") may be a "signal"

  • 1999 -- -- --- - NIST
    : MIM or MCMXCIX ?

  • 1999-01-01 Fri - Start of the last year of the 1900s.
    One Year to Y2k itself

  • 1999-01-01 Fri - Effective introduction of the (electronic)
    financial Euro (ex-ecu) within continental Europe - dual accounting.
    See Europe and Euro for its symbol

  • 1999-01-01 Fri - Y2k failure in year-ahead predictions

  • 1999-01-02 Sat - AIUI, the strict "Jo Anne Effect" window
    begins

  • 1999-01-02 Sat -
    YYMMDD sorting with one-year look-ahead fails (or 1999-01-01)

  • 1999-01-04 Mon - First working day of 1999, generally

  • 1999-01-05 Tue - First working day of 1999, Scotland

  • 1999-01-09 Sat - 1999-9 : 9th day of '99
    (cf. 1999-04-09)

  • 1999-02-01 Mon -
    YYMM sorting with one-year look-ahead fails (or 1999-01-01)

  • 1999-02-05 Fri - Airline reservations:
    330-day lookahead meets Y2k

  • 1999-02-11 Thu - Day 90000 of the UK Gregorian Calendar

  • 1999-03-02 Tue - MS-DOS daycount rollover to 7000;
    no effects predicted

  • 1999-03-28 Sun - Start of European
    Summer Time, clocks go forward

  • 1999-04-01 Thu - Start of Canadian & Japanese FY.
    Also for NY in USA

  • 1999-04-04 Sun - Start of American
    Summer Time, clocks go forward

  • 1999-04-06 Tue - Start of United Kingdom FY 1999-2000

  • 1999-04-09 Fri - 1999-99 : 99th day of '99 (D. Scott Secor)
    - a "nonsense" or "marker" date? See 1999-09-09

  • 1999-04-20 Tue - 255 days to year 2000.
    A byte holds values 0..255.
    The more significant byte of a word "days till 2000" becomes empty;
    programming slips may now show


  • 1999-05-24 Mon - See 1999-05-31


  • 1999-05-31 Mon -
    UK Spring Bank Holiday and US Memorial Day, last Monday in May.
    A version of MS Outlook uses the fourth Monday in May, and so is
    a week early some years.
    Affects other MS applications?


  • 1999-06-01 Tue - Start of PhTWOday national dual running -
    "The Big Number".

    Several UK areas (London,
    Southampton, Portsmouth, Cardiff, Coventry, Northern Ireland) had
    phone number changes.
    Mobile numbers also change from Sep 30.

    London (0)1#1 xxx xxxx numbers (# in [7,8])
    will become (0)20 #xxx xxxx.

    Dual running in London ends 2000-04-22, q.v.; other areas later.

    Oftel is now Ofcom


  • 1999-07-01 Thu - Abolition of duty-free within EU (travel)

  • 1999-07-01 Thu -
    Australian Financial Year starts. Also USA: 46 (?) States'
    fiscal Y2k starts, FY 2000; but NY=04-01, TX=09-01; AL,MI=10-01

  • 1999-07-01 Thu - Y2k failure in half-year-ahead predictions

  • 1999-07-05 Mon - 180 days before 2000-01-01

  • 1999-08-01 Sun - Windows 98 "Office 2000 Beta expiry" bug
    starts. Upgrade RAGENT.DLL to version 9.0.2612 or later


  • 1999-08-19 Thu - First EOW related
    update to the GPS Almanacs, at 2200 Zulu;
    updating takes 24h overall, and could affect users


  • 1999-08-21 Sat -
    End of GPS Week 1023 (from 1980-01-06), 10-bit field "EOW" rollover
    (nominally at 0000h the next day; but, because of
    Leap Seconds,
    actually at 1999-08-21 23:59:47 UTC).
    USNO,
    gpsinformation.net.

    It seems that most receivers are OK; some may lose lock for a few
    minutes at rollover; a few may not lock in Week #0 (mod 1024)

  • 1999-08-22 Sun - See yesterday, if East of the Atlantic


  • 1999-08-23 Mon - See 1999-08-30


  • 1999-08-30 Mon -
    UK Late Summer Holiday, last Monday in August.
    A version of MS Outlook uses the fourth Monday in August, and so is
    a week early some years.
    Affects other MS applications?


  • 1999-09-01 Wed - Start of FY for TX in USA

  • 1999-09-09 Thu - Default "nonsense" or "marker" date in
    many data-entry screens - 9-9-99 may have been used as an indefinite
    "Purge" date - purge file overflow?
    See Randall Bart?
    Subsequently, data may be unprotected

  • 1999-09-23 Thu - 99 days to year 2000


  • 1999-09-30 Thu - Start of UK mobile phone number change
    dual running.

    Dual running ends April 2001


  • 1999-10-01 Fri - USA's federal government fiscal Y2k starts,
    FY 2000. Also for AL, MI in USA

  • 1999-10-01 Fri - Y2k failure in quarter-ahead predictions

  • 1999-10-01 Fri - Those changing from YY/M/D to YYYY/M/D
    may find that the field becomes too long as the month (or day) goes
    from 9 to 10. Note 2

  • 1999-10-03 Sun - 90 days to Year 2000 -
    90 day intervals are common (& 60,30)

  • 1999-10-31 Sun - End of Northern
    Summer Time, clocks go back

  • 1999-11-11 Thu - 1999 in Japan is eleventh year of Heisei;
    demand for railway platform tickets marked 11/11/11 11:11 seems to have
    crashed the system (Risks Digest 20.65)

  • 1999-11-19 Fri - All digits odd, last until 3111-11-11;
    cf. 0888-08-28, 2000-02-02

  • 1999-12 -- --- - Dec '99 may be a "Signal"

  • 1999-12-01 Wed -
    One Calendar Month to Y2k itself. Monthly look-ahead fails

  • 1999-12-24 Fri - Christmas Eve -
    Note 14, until 2000-01-05

  • 1999-12-25 Sat - Christmas Day

  • 1999-12-26 Sun - Boxing Day, traditionally;
    but nowadays Boxing Day is often the first weekday after Christmas

  • 1999-12-27 Mon - Week 52 of 1999 starts,
    the last ISO week of 19xx

  • 1999-12-27 Mon - UK Holiday in lieu of 25th

  • 1999-12-28 Tue - UK Holiday in lieu of 26th

  • 1999-12-31 Fri - UK Bank Holiday
    (Confirmed by HMG, 1998-06-03)

  • 1999-12-31 Fri - Sometimes used as a special marker,
    such as a "Never Expires" date
    (IBM Tapes marked 99365 - all may expire today, or not; also 99366, 99999)

  • 1999-12-31 Fri - Support for much software may cease
    after today

  • 1999-12-31 Fri - Last working date for
    IBM CICS 3.3

  • 1999-12-31 Fri - Last working date for versions of
    Intuit's Quicken online banking

  • 1999-12-32 Sat?- Reported as sighted in a PC RTC.
    Watch out for such dates in data

  • 1999-13-01 Sat?- Reported as sighted as a Netware file date.
    Watch out for such dates in data

  • 1999-999 --- - (etc.) a better
    "special" date than Apr 9th ; = 2001-09-25 ; see 9999

  • 1999-99-99 --- - (etc.) a better
    "special" date than Sep 9th ; = 2007-06-07 ; see 9999.







  • 2000 -- -- --- -
    THE YEAR 2000
    - an annus horribilis
    - Still the 20th Century, but some will say the 21st






  • 2000 -- -- --- - Year "00" may be a "signal",
    e.g. "invalid"

  • 2000-00-00 --- - As next:

  • 2000-01-00 --- - Apparently, some systems have this
    - check its absence - Note 12

  • 2000-01-01 Sat - CMJD=51544. DOS day 7305.
    One year to M3 and c21

  • 2000-01-01 Sat - Final stage of compulsory metrication
    in UK (apart from roads, beer, ... ?)

  • 2000-01-01 Sat - Australian map grid
    change

  • 2000-01-01 Sat - It has been asserted that some computer
    systems (S/36? S/38? AS/400 B-10?) will not work
    after 1999; the IBM site referred

  • 2000-01-01 Sat - AS/400 internal hardware clock MSB flips,
    see 2071-05-10

  • 2000-01-01 Sat - Reported
    that GMS/SMS crashes a PC today

  • 2000-01-01 Sat - Notes 2,
    7, 8, 9,
    13, 16

  • 2000-01-02 Sun - (ff.) Completion of first-day
    processing now possible

  • 2000-01-03 Mon - Start of ISO Week 1 -
    first week in 20xx, 1999W52 clean-up now possible

  • 2000-01-03 Mon - First Business Day of 2000 (USA).
    UK Holiday :-)

  • 2000-01-04 Tue - First Business Day of 2000 (most of UK)

  • 2000-01-05 Wed - First Business Day of 2000 (Scotland)

  • 2000-01-05 Wed - Note 2

  • 2000-01-06 Thu - Note 13

  • 2000-01-07 Fri - Last working day of first week of 2000,
    in most countries. Weekly batch work, payday

  • 2000-01-10 Mon - Note 2

  • 2000-01-12 Wed - Note 2

  • 2000-01-17 Mon - First USA Monday holiday (MLK day)
    - Note 13

  • 2000-01-31 Mon - Last day of first Calendar Month of 2000.
    Monthly batch work. Tomorrow, clean-up for the first month of 2000 begins

  • 2000-01-32 ff. - Sightings of these have been reported

  • 2000-02-02 Wed - All digits even, first since 0888-08-28;
    cf. 1999-11-19, 3111-11-11

  • 2000-02-15 Tue - USA employees' 1999 W2 forms are due out.





  • 2000-02-28 Mon - Not month-end

  • 2000-02-29 Tue -
    This valid date is not expected to
    occur by everyone; some major software is or has been wrong here.
    One reason is missing the 400-year rule;
    another is using full rules on a YY date. Check that March 1st is next.

    Examples : RFC2030 is wrong; JTIDS (Mil; Link 16) tables
    were said by doncio
    to err (fixed?);

    Excel 2000 (pdf)
    ;
    IBM VM/ESA 2.3 needs an APAR [PTF#UM29184]); SCO UNIX 3.3?
    I've seen it said that Motorola CPU RTCs use 4+100 rules, so omit
    this day; so far, I remain unconvinced


  • 2000-02-29 Tue - Henceforth, unless fixed, MS DHCP client
    date error - IP leases a day too old.
    Q230173



  • 2000-02-29 Tue - It has been said that un-upgraded HP 300
    Basic entered dates fail after today.


  • 2000-02-29 Tue - It has been said that some PDP-11
    computers will not boot after this date - a diagnostics bug. But Mentec
    did not refer to this; and another expert (RHS of PA) says that it is
    just that the 11/93 & 11/94 consoles get the Leap Year rule wrong


  • 2000-02-29 Tue - For this day, Her Majesty should NOT
    have been
    sending any of her traditional messages (were telegrams) to centenarians.






  • 2000-02-30 --- - "Hollywood Squares" (TV game show) wrongly
    claimed that 2000-02-30 would exist

  • 2000-02-31 --- - With 2000-02-30,
    reportedly seen in some PC software

  • 2000-03-00 --- - Reportedly, VxWorks (Wind River Systems)
    has this (at least in some versions and on some platforms)
    instead of 2000-02-29


  • 2000-03-01 Wed - Follows 2000-02-29.
    Some leap year errors may not have shown yesterday

  • 2000-03-01 Wed - UK Data Protection Act 1998 comes into effect

  • 2000-03-01 Wed - From 1918-03-01, first day for which certain
    implementations of Zeller's Congruence
    have negative-mod-7 error

  • 2000-03-25 Sat - Possible UK/EU Summer Time error,
    since 1900-03-25 was Sunday. The Boat Race, 16:10 (GvI 15:40). :-(

  • 2000-03-26 Sun - Start of Summer Time
    (UK, EU, ...)

  • 2000-04-01 Sat - 2Q'00 starts, 1Q'00 clean-up -
    Last April Fool's Day of the Millennium.
    Possible US DST error, since 1900-04-01 was Sunday

  • 2000-04-02 Sun - Belated Start of
    Summer Time (USA, ...)

  • 2000-04-05 Wed - End of United Kingdom FY 1999-2000,
    which was a Leap Year

  • 2000-04-06 Thu - Start of United Kingdom FY 2000-2001

  • 2000-04-06 Thu -
    Introduction of different taxation in Scotland?

  • 2000-04-09 Sun - The hundredth day of the year
    (cf. 1999-04-09). Note 2

  • 2000-04-15 Sat -
    USA taxpayer panic day (W2 forms are due back to govt)

  • 2000-04-15 Sat - Systems thinking that it is now 1900
    will think that today is Easter Sunday


  • 2000-04-22 Sat - "PhTWOday" (Easter Saturday) -
    "The Big Number" - national dual running ends (see 1999-06-01).

    Several UK areas have had phone number changes.

    London (0)1#1 xxx xxxx numbers (# in [7,8])
    have become (0)20 #xxx xxxx.

    The change from 7-digits to 8 digits for local London numbers is
    on this day.

    See also Clive Feather
    for phone info.

    Oftel is now Ofcom


  • 2000-04-23 Sun - St. George's Day, and Easter Sunday.
    Bard's anniversaries

  • 2000-04-30 Sun - First month of Y2k finishing in a weekend.
    Note 16

  • 2000-04-30 Sun - USA quarterly 941 withholding tax is
    processed (on a Sunday?)

  • 2000-05 -- --- - Solar Max now expected around mid-year
    - Note 17

  • 2000-06-28 Wed - the 180th day of 2000

  • 2000-07-14 Fri - QEQM = QV, previous longest Q in this country

  • 2000-08-04 Fri - QEQM = 100 celebrated

  • 2000-08-05 Sat - UK phones -
    Cardiff - 01222 becomes 029 20

  • 2000-08-05 Sat - UK phones -
    Coventry - 01203 becomes 024 76

  • 2000-08-27 Sun - Early
    Australian Summer Time, for Olympics

  • 2000-09-** *** - Certain consequences of over-celebration
    are starting to emerge ..

  • 2000-09-01 Fri - Note 2

  • 2000-09-02 Sat - UK phones -
    Portsmouth - 01705 becomes 023 92

  • 2000-09-02 Sat - UK phones -
    Southampton - 01703 becomes 023 80

  • 2000-09-06 Wed - Note 2

  • 2000-09-09 Sat - Sometimes a "signal" date -
    cf. 1999-09-09

  • 2000-09-10 Sun - Note 2

  • 2000-09-13 Wed - Note 2

  • 2000-09-16 Sat - UK phones -
    Belfast - 01232 becomes 028 90

  • 2000-09-16 Sat - UK phones -
    other Northern Ireland - 01xxx yyyyyy become 028 ##yy yyyy

  • 2000-09-27 Wed - Note 2

  • 2000-09-30 Sat - USA federal FY ends

  • 2000-10-01 Sun - Note 2

  • 2000-10-04 Wed - Note 2

  • 2000-10-10 Tue - Note 2. (VS=VS?)

  • 2000-10-11 Wed - Note 2.


  • 2000-10-14 Sat - UK phones - London - 0171 & 0181
    stop working today. For those 01x1 yyy zzzz use 020 xyyy zzzz

  • 2000-10-28 Sat - False Summer Time ends,
    on 1900 days

  • 2000-10-29 Sun - Northern Summer Time ends

  • 2000-12-30 Sat - Allowing for the errors of the Julian
    Calendar, the Third Millennium of our era, when the Sun has returned
    to its starting point with respect to the Earth for the 2000th time,
    starts at around 03:00:00 today

  • 2000-12-31 Sun - 366th day of year,
    possibly unexpected; see 1996. Norwegian train failures!

  • 2000-12-31 Sun - Like 1972, 2028, ..., contains 54
    Sun..Sat calendar weeks or parts thereof; this day is the 54th week

  • 2000-12-31 Sun - Year-End processing

  • 2000-12-31 Sun - London - low tide, 23:00 approx.; caveat





    2001 -
    All is not yet clear ...




  • 2001 -- -- --- - For the first time in a century,
    last year is "00"

  • 2001-01-01 Mon - Third Millennium A.D.
    and Twenty-First Century A.D. start. UK bicentennial; AU centennial

  • 2001-01-01 Mon - Applications hard-coded for the
    20th Century proper now fail

  • 2001-01-01 Mon -
    Reported that Tandem systems overflow; no details.
    Reported that Y2k fix to 'Automated Storage Manager' ends; no URL given

  • 2001-01-01 Mon - Fixes that just change 1900 to 2000 fail.
    Allegedly, this may include versions of Windows, 98 & NT

  • 2001-01-01 Mon - New date interpretation ambiguities start,
    as YY enters the ranges of MM & DD.

    * Forms YY-MM-DD, DD-MM-YY & MM-DD-YY; general.

    * Forms MMM DD & MMM YY, DD MMM & YY MMM;
    especially food dating

  • 2001-01-01 Mon - See 2009-09-09. 010101 has been used as
    a marker for "unknown DoB"

  • 2001-01-20 Sat -
    Is 20012001 YYYYDDMM or DDMMYYYY, not that it matters?

  • 2001-02-20 Tue -
    Is 20012002 YYYYDDMM 20 Feb 2001 or DDMMYYYY 20 Jan 2002?
    Is 20022001 YYYYDDMM 20 Jan 2002 or DDMMYYYY 20 Feb 2001?

  • 2001-02-29 --- - Will not exist; but check software

  • 2001-03-25 Sun - UK/EU Summer Time starts, 01:00 GMT

  • 2001-04-?? ??? -
    End of UK mobile phone number change dual running


  • 2001-04-01 Sun -
    (& MJD52k) US DST starts 0200h local time.
    Reported that MS Visual C++ RTL gets an error whenever April 1 is a
    Sunday, and starts its DST a week late.
    Affects Windows applications.
    See Risks Digest 21.34/9
    for an occurrence in 2001. Fix issued

  • 2001-04-05 Thu - End of United Kingdom FY 2000-2001,
    which was not a Leap Year

  • 2001-04-08 Sun - See 2001-04-01

  • 2001-04-19 Thu - 04:25:21 GMT is UNIX time_t 987654321

  • 2001-04-28 Sat - UK mobiles and pagers -
    numbers now start "07"

  • 2001-09-01 Sat - New UK vehicle numbering, AA99 BBB.
    DVLA Local
    Tag list


  • 2001-09-09 Sun - UNIX time_t 1 Gs from 1970,
    at 01:46:40 GMT. 999,999,999 special? Also JavaScript (+Java) 1 Tms
    - Note 10, Note 18

  • 2001-09-25 Tue - = 1999-999

  • 2001-10-02 Tue - First palindromic YYYYMMDD date since 1380

  • 2001-10-28 Sun - UK/EU Summer Time ends, 01:00 GMT

  • 2001-11-24 Sat - UNIX time_t 2^24 minutes, 20:16 GMT

  • 2001-12-31 Mon - Lotus Organizer 1,0, 1.1 finish today

  • 2001-12-31 Mon - as 2002-12-30


  • 2002-01-01 Tue - Euro cash circulation starts within much of
    continental Europe ("Euroland"). EU, less Denmark, Sweden, UK

  • 2002-02-?? ??? - About mid-month, Y4.7k of the Chinese Huangdi
    Era. Huangdi 4697-10-13, launch of Chinese unmanned spacecraft, 1999-11-20

  • 2002-02- . . . - Euroland termination of national tangible
    currencies this month (Daily Telegraph, 2002-01-01, p.4)
    - possible last days :-


    • 2002-01-27 Sun - Netherlands

    • 2002-02-09 Sat - Ireland

    • 2002-02-17 Sun - France

    • 2002-02-28 Thu - Austria Belgium Finland Germany Greece
      Italy Luxembourg Portugal Spain.


  • 2002-02-20 Wed - Doubly palindromic in the UK as DDMMYYYY,
    and ISO but not US;
    and in the evening, 20/02/2002 20:02:20.02 is quadruply so, as far as
    the digits go. It is CMJD 52325, also palindromic

  • 2002-02-28 Thu - Euroland termination of national tangible
    currencies completed (Daily Telegraph, 2001-01-03, p.17)

  • 2002-05-27 Mon - NOT the UK Spring Holiday

  • 2002-06-03 Mon - Queen's 50th Anniversary holiday in UK.
    Tuesday 4th is also a holiday

  • 2002-06-04 Tue - A standard UK holiday, displaced 8 days

  • 2002-06-30 Sun - Effective termination of dual accounting
    with pre-Euro currencies within continental Europe

  • 2002-07-01 Mon - Original finish of withdrawal of traditional
    money in continental Europe

  • 2002-09-14 Sat - 250th anniversary of the start of the Gregorian
    Calendar in Britain. Other than myself, no-one seems to have noticed

  • 2002-12-30 Mon - A DOS GAWK,
    using library strftime, has an ISO week number error. Example:
    Mon/Tue/Wed, when in Dec 29-31, should be in Week 01.
    Many years affected. Other software perhaps likewise

  • 2002-12-31 Tue - Ditto


  • 2003-01-01 Wed - Some DEC Basics put
    (Year-1970)×1000+DayOfYear in a 16-bit integer
    - this now fails, being 33001, and so >32767

  • 2003-01-01 Wed - Burroughs Unisys A Series system date -
    Note 5

  • 2003-08-28 Thu - Or thereabouts - first difference caused
    by new Saudi rules for Islamic month-length, from AH 1423.
    JAS

  • 2003-11-28 Fri - At about GMT 00:00 or 24:00
    (reports are unclear), GPS 8-bit week rollover since last
    Leap Second at 1998-12-31 23:59:60 Thu; a
    bug in Motorola Encore receivers gets 29th for a second of the 28th.
    Risks Digest 22.94/3 refers

  • 2003-12-29 Mon - VBScript, as 2007-12-31

  • 2003-12-31 Wed - Last date for DEC RT-11 file system, 5-bit year
    from 1972=0. VXworks


  • 2004-01-01 Thu - Alleged Canvas 3.5 Mac "Year 2004" bug;
    100 years from 1904. See Risks Digest
    23.50/3, 23.51/7, and 2004-08-31 below

  • 2004-01-10 Sat - UNIX time_t $40000000 at 13:37:04 UTC.
    See Risks Digest 23.12/3 and 23.13/9,11
    for resulting failures. Affects Turnpike message-IDs

  • 2004-02-29 Sun - First "Leap Day" of c21 & M3;
    Risks Digest 23.25/1, 23.29/8 refer
    to failure cases. Displays of some GM Pontiacs affected

  • 2004-05-01 Sat - EU enlargement :-
    Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary,
    Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia, Slovenia

  • 2004-07-17 Sat - GPS Receiver Almanac Rollover,
    256 weeks after GPS 1024-week rollover

  • 2004-08-31 Tue - 12:30, Mac
    Canvas 3.5 expiry,
    patchable. See Risks Digest 23.51/7

  • 2004-10-02 Sat - @21:24:16 local, date rollover stops
    "stone" file system - Discreet,
    Montreal. Cause not known. Unix/Linux/?

  • 2004-12-31 Fri - 2004-366 - cf. 1996-366


  • 2005-??-?? ??? - "Some *really* old versions of UNIX
    (e.g. 16-bit BSD) die in 2005."

  • 2005-06-01 Wed - London telephone 020 3xxx xxxx release by
    Ofcom; issue to customers expected in Autumn 2005. NOT 0203 xxx xxxx

  • 2005-11-29 Tue - 04:53:20 GMT : 212 Gs from JD 0.0

  • 2005-12-31 Sat - 23:59:60 UTC : first Leap Second for 7 years


  • 2006-05-13 Sat - 01:27:28 GMT :
    Unix Epoch end (2038) minus 1 Gs -
    many AOLServer web servers failed -
    see Risks Digest 24.34/3

  • 2006-10-29 Sun - US DST ends today, not next week

  • 2006-11-05 Sun - Safe to update US DST code for 2007?

  • 2006-12-31 Sun - HP3000, End Of Life


  • 2007 -- -- --- - NA DST rule change 2006/07 - US CA BM BS TC

  • 2007-??-?? ??? - UK telephone code 03 to be introduced

  • 2007-01-01 Mon - Slovenia adopted the Euro

  • 2007-01-01 Mon - Book Numbering :
    nominal start of ISBN-13 - Checker

  • 2007-01-01 Mon -
    "USA FAA computers fail, 32 years from 1975". TZ? 2006?

  • 2007-03-01 Thu - US
    DST rule change
    effective

  • 2007-03-11 Sun - First earlier DST start in NA

  • 2007-04-01 Sun - UK
    MSF 60kHz time signal
    moved from Rugby, Warwickshire to Anthorn, Cumbria

  • 2007-04-01 Sun - First unexpected DST not-start in NA

  • 2007-04-06 Fri - Good Friday and
    start of UK Financial Year -
    3.2 applies

  • 2007-05-19 Sat - MS-DOS CLOCK$ daycount 10000 - no effect?

  • 2007-06-07 Thu - = 1999-99-99

  • 2007-08-09 Thu - CMJD 54321

  • 2007-09-12 Wed - Ethiopian (Ge'ez) calendar, 2000/01/01 - Y2k

  • 2007-10-28 Sun - First unexpected DST not-finish in NA

  • 2007-11-04 Sun - First later DST finish in NA

  • 2007-12-20 Thu - QEII = oldest monarch in this country

  • 2007-12-31 Mon - Also 2003-12-29, 2019-12-30, and every 28
    years after in c.21 : Some VBScript DatePart give wrong ISO
    Week Number - see in VBScript Date and Time
    2
    . Error seen both in Web pages and in WSH; still present in Vista






  • 2008-01-19 Sat - 30 years before
    2038-01-19 - mortgage look-ahead?

  • 2008-02-29 Fri - "Leap Day"

  • 2008-03-23 Sun - Easter Sunday
    was unusually early (previously this day in 1913 & next
    in 2160; earliest possible date, March 22, 1818 & 2285).
    Still in EU Winter Time!

  • 2008-12-31 Wed - 2008-366 - cf. 1996-366



    .



  • 2009-01-01 Thu - NOAA: Termination of satellite processing
    of distress signals from 121.5/243 MHz emergency beacons.
    Use 406 MHz

  • 2009-01-20 Tue - POTUS change - noon EST

  • 2009-02-13 Fri - 23:31:30 GMT is UNIX time_t 1234567890

  • 2009-09-09 Wed - 090909 is another possible valid nonsense
    or marker date; as with, of course, other 0x0x0x & 1x1x1x dates,
    or anything with YY small


    .



  • 2???-??-?? ??? - Introduction of the Euro in the UK ???

  • 2010-01-01 Fri - Y2.01K. There will be some who
    have coded only for Years 200#

  • 2010-01-01 Fri -
    Sorting YYMMDD decade-reversed covers 1990-2009 only

  • 2010-01-01 Fri - Reported ANSI C library overflow.
    Very dubious. RSVP if you can explain it

  • 2010/03/22 Sun - Orthodox (Julian) Easter Sunday is on the
    earliest possible date (2010-04-04)

  • 2010-12-25 Sat - CMJD 55555


  • 2011-09-14 Wed - @01:46:39 UTC less leap seconds,
    GPS 999999999 seconds

  • 2011-11-11 Fri - Seen as a "marker" date
    - cf. 1999-09-09. Contains 11/11/11 11:11:11


  • 2012 -- -- --- - Like 2028, but for Mon..Sun weeks;
    contains 54 calendar weeks or parts thereof. Also 1984, 2040, ..

  • 2012-02-29 Wed - "Leap Day"

  • 2012-07-13 Fri - UNIX time_t $50000000 at 11:01:20 UTC

  • 2012-12-22 Sat - World may end Fri/Sat/Sun - see 2023-12-23

  • 2012-12-31 Mon - 2012-366 - cf. 1996-366


  • 2013-01-21 Mon - Possible POTUS change - noon EST


  • 2015-09-05 Sat - Apollo/HP 32-bit rollover
    Note 1

  • 2015-09-09 Wed - QEII = QV,
    previous longest-regnant in this country


  • 2019-01-01 Tue - First probable confusibility by value of
    the first two digits of the date between YY and YYYY forms

  • 2019-03-01 Fri - Until 2100-03-01, last day for which
    certain implementations of Zeller's
    Congruence
    have negative-mod-7 error

  • 2019-03-24 Sun - On proposed Aleppo rules, first Easter
    date differing from Gregorian (2019-04-21) - see
    Note 22

  • 2019-04-07 Sun - Second GPS week rollover
    just before today, UTC

  • 2019-06-06 Thu - MUMPS day 2^16

  • 2019-12-30 Mon - VBScript, as 2007-12-31

  • 2019-12-31 Tue - YY-date limit of Microsoft Excel 95.
    MS NT 4.0 fails after today if the RTC Century byte is "19"?
    Windows NT boot windows into 1920-2019?






  • 2020-01-01 Wed - Half a century after UNIX/Java* Epoch;
    date windowing failures possible

  • 2020-01-01 Wed - Henceforth, Mac (System 6.0.4+)
    Date & Time control panel cannot set current date

  • 2021-01-14 Thu - UNIX time_t $60000000 at 08:25:36 UTC

  • 2023-02-25 Sat - Third TJD 0; CMJD 60000

  • 2023-12-23 Sat - End of World, Mayan Calendar (Long Count
    13.0.0.0.0). May well be 21-23 December 2012 AD; opinions differ

  • 2024-11-09 Sat - MS-DOS CLOCK$ daycount 16384 - no effect?


  • 2025-12-31 Wed - Versions of
    Intuit's
    QuickBooks for DOS - dates fail at end of year

  • 2026-01-19 Mon - CCSDS 32-bit time code MSB sets 03:14:08
    TAI, 2^31 seconds from 1958-01-01 (q.v.)

  • 2026-06-29 Mon - Day 100000 of the UK Gregorian Calendar

  • 2027-??-?? ??? - Asteroid 1999 AN10 approaches Earth;
    closest 0.00259(1) AU (lunar distance)

  • 2027-12-31 Fri - Versions of
    Intuit's
    Quicken, QuickPay 3 for Windows,
    and QuickBooks for Windows & Mac - dates fail at end of year.
    Also HP 300 Pascal?

  • 2028 -- -- --- - Like 1972, 2000, 2056, ..., contains 54
    Sun..Sat calendar weeks or parts thereof

  • 2028-01-01 Sat - "1900 + a signed byte" and "1900 + 7 bits"
    year overflow - back to 1772 or 1900

  • 2028-01-01 Sat - Systems Y2k-remedied by 28-year setback
    fail today

  • 2028-10-26 Thu - Asteroid 1997 XF11 passes Earth

  • 2029-07-18 Wed - UNIX time_t $70000000 at 05:49:52 UTC

  • 2029-12-31 Mon - Common end of windowing interval -
    YY-date limit of Microsoft Excel 97






  • 2030-01-01 Tue - Half a century after MS-DOS file date Epoch;
    date windowing failures possible


  • 2031-01-01 Wed - From HP-UX 10.20 'at' manpage: 'at' will
    not schedule jobs beyond the year 2030.
    That's local time


  • 2031-12-31 Wed - Last date for Palm Pilot handheld


  • 2033-05-18 Wed - UNIX time_t 2 Gs from 1970, at
    03:33:20 GMT. 1,999,999,999 special?
    Also JavaScript (+Java) 2 Tms - Note 10


  • 2034-01-01 Sun - Share/43 rolls back to 1970

  • 2034-09-30 Sat - Time overflow in some ancient UNIX,
    which was fixed long ago. Genuine, but no longer significant. See 2038

  • 2035-12-31 Mon - at 2400h today, Microsoft's
    "Year 2000 statement of compliance timeframe" ends.
    Probably many MS products are affected, as at c. 2000


  • 2036-01-01 Tue - Burroughs Unisys A Series system date -
    Note 5

  • 2036-02-05 Tue - Note 6

  • 2036-02-05 Tue - 06:28:16 local is 2^32 seconds from
    1899-12-30 00:00:00; Delphi TDateTime can no longer be converted to
    dword seconds

  • 2036-02-07 Thu - 06:28:16 GMT is 2^32 seconds from
    1900-01-01 00:00:00 GMT;
    NTP timestamp overflows, possibly at 00:54:54 (IETF) (diff 20002 s),
    yesterday if 1900-02-29 included. Also TIME, SNTP.
    RFC 1305?

  • 2036-02-07 Thu - Microsoft Word 2000 date
    sorting
    fails

  • 2036-12-31 Wed - Date limit of Visual C++
    (4.x) runtime library
    MS NT 4.0 fails after today if the RTC Century byte is "20"?

  • 2037-01-01 Thu - Reported NTP overflow - implausible

  • 2037-02-06 Fri - 06:28:16 GMT is 2^32 seconds from
    1901-01-01-00:00:00 GMT

  • 2037-12-31 Thu - Code using "C" libraries may fail after
    today. WS_FTP (some editions) Year 2000 support ends

  • 2038-01-01 Fri - From HP-UX 11.00 'at' manpage:
    'at' will not schedule jobs beyond the year 2037.
    That's local time

  • 2038-01-01 Fri - Apple Rhapsody OS
    was said to fail. I can no longer locate this date at Apple;
    I think it should be as next.



  • 2038-01-19 Tue -
    32-bit UNIX/POSIX : 2^31 seconds from 1970-01-01, time_t
    MSB sets @03:14:08 GMT, and signed
    time_t<0 or time_t=-1
    (the latter may be right; but the former may be used)
    is an error marker - "C" libraries: Note 4;
    Porquet page;
    Year 2000 Programming. See 1901-12-13.

    "Version 3.1 of InterSystems' Cache (www.intersys.com) crashes
    on January 19, 2038. Related to C calendar library problem
    A fix is reportedly in the works."


  • 2038-04-23 Fri - CMJD 2^16


  • 2038-04-25 Sun - Easter Sunday is
    as late as possible this year (previous, this day in 1943)


  • 2038-??-?? ??? - "World Cup namespace fills" (Soccer)

  • 2038-11-21 Sun - Third GPS week rollover
    just before today, UTC


  • 2039-09-18 Sun - Y5.8k Jewish starts at Sunday sunset.
    Tishri 1 (Rosh Hashanah), 5800






  • 2040-01-01 Sun - Pick, possible limit???

  • 2040-??-?? ??? - Alleged IBM S/390 STCK overflow ???

  • 2040-02-06 Mon - At 06:28:16, old Apple Macs' longword
    seconds from 1904-01-01 overflows

  • 2041-01-01 Tue - Reported "that IBM mainframe internal clocks
    will not go past the year 2041". Not yet confirmed.

  • 2041-11-16 Sat - Unisys BTOS / CTOS Operating System -
    Clock will roll over at 2400h to 1952-03-01 -
    FAQ



  • 2042-09-17 Wed - IBM 370 TOD clock overflow
    (long seconds (1.048576 s) from 1900) at 23:53:47 approx.
    1900-01-01 + 2^52 µs

  • 2044-01-01 Fri - MS-DOS : 2^6 years from 1980,
    7-bit file date MSB sets

  • 2044-01-01 Fri - Motorola VERSAdos : 2^6 years from 1980,
    6-bit file date rolls to 1980 - Note 15

  • 2046-01-01 Mon - Amiga system date failure

  • 2046-06-08 Fri - BYTE says some UNIX password aging fails,
    64^2 weeks from 1970. But see 2048-07-01

  • 2047-09-19 Thu - CCSDS 16-bit day code MSB sets,
    2^15 days from 1958-01-01 (q.v.)

  • 2048-01-01 Wed - AD 2^11 starts -
    12-bit signed overflow - PDP-8???

  • 2048-01-19 Sun - Stratus VOS OS failure
    (1980-01-01 + 2^31 seconds)

  • 2048-07-01 Wed - Some UNIX password aging fails;
    64^2 weeks from 1970 (reported as June, or 2046 (q.v.)

  • 2049-12-31 Fri - Microsoft Project 95 (and earlier) limit






  • 2050-01-01 Sat - YY-windowing into 1950-2049 collapses

  • 2057-09-17 Mon - If Pick Day 1 is 1968-01-01, this is Day 32768

  • 2058-02-08 Fri - TJD +32767 : greatest 16-bit signed TJD

  • 2059-09-19 Fri - 2^15 days from 1970-01-01. Signed overflow?


  • 2060-??-?? ??? - Around now, present-type TLEs for artificial
    satellites may become ambiguous, as they use 2-digit years (YYDDD)


  • 2060-01-01 Thu - The trick of using a two-digit year
    representation with the first digit Hex (98,99,A0,A1..F9) fails today
    If the digits are stored as nibbles, no more can be done;
    if as characters, 200 more years brings the end of Z9

  • 2068-01-01 Sun - Sun SPARC: SunOS, Solaris, BSD/OS, Linux:
    in RTC, YYMMDD=000101 again

  • 2069-01-01 Tue - POSIX standard assumes
    1970 ≤ year < 2069 (gnulist)

  • 2069-01-19 Sat - At 03:14:08, 2^31 secs of the Third Millennium

  • 2069-09-18 Wed - 2^15 days from 1980-01-01
    MS-DOS CLOCK$ daycount word MSB sets - no effect?
    Seemingly used in Oyster


  • 2070-01-01 Wed - Centenary of 1970-01-01, the start of
    UNIX, C, etc., time_t, and of JavaScript time.
    Possible Y2k-type errors in year handling appear. But see 2038

  • 2071-05-10 Sun - AS/400 internal hardware clock
    (42-bits of 1024 µs centred on start of 2000) rolls over
    at 11:56:53.685248 to 1928-08-23

  • 2072-??-?? - "Exact Date TBD: Overflow of Milstar Operating
    System". Possibly GPS-UTC signed 8-bit overflow, year approximate

  • 2078-12-31 Sat - Excel 7.0 - The Last Day, #65380 (Phil E);
    and Excel 95

  • 2079-06-05 Mon - 2^16 days from 1899-12-30 = Day 0; Delphi
    TDateTime resolution halves for dates from here.
    Previous, in 1989, 1944; Next, 2258

  • 2079-06-06 Tue - 2^16 days from 1900-01-01 = Day 1

  • 2079-08-04 Fri - 2^16 days from 1900-03-01 = Day 1


  • 2080-01-01 Mon - MS-DOS file dates, when displayed with
    two-digit years, are ambiguous if files may be dated today or later.
    Windows File Manager, set to
    ISO 8601 dates, drops 100 years
    from displayed file dates of 2080+. My Amstrad PPC640, bought in 1988,
    evidently cleverly windows YY into 1980-2079; so will now err on boot


  • 2094-02-06 Sat - CCSDS 32-bit time code overflow 06:28:16 TAI,
    2^32 seconds from 1958-01-01 (q.v.)

  • 2096-01-01 Sun - As 2060, but for two Hex characters






  • 2100-01-01 Fri - Y2.1K
    - will they never learn?

    Most current PC BIOS run out of dates.

    MS-DOS DIR renders filedate years 2100-2107 as 99.

    Ada: package Ada.Calendar defines years
    as being in the range 1901..2099.

    Many short-term Y2k fixes fail


  • 2100 02 29 --- - Next non-existent February 29 in a
    year divisible by 4 ; first failure of plain "4-year" rule since 1900

    (except for Greek Orthodox outside Greece,
    using Julian; and for the usual PC RTC);

    End of 200 years of 28-year calendar repeat.
    Start of 100 years thereof

  • 2100-03-01 Mon - Zeller, as 2000-03-01






  • 2101-01-01 Sat - POSIX.1-1996 spec bug begins to act -
    UTC0-to-"seconds since the Epoch" 2100 leap error


  • 2101-01-02 Sun - and probably every 400 years after :
    Some VBScript DatePart give wrong ISO Week Number -
    see via 2007-12-31


  • 2106-02-07 Sun - 32-bit UNIX : 2^32 seconds from 1970-01-01,
    unsigned time overflows @06:28:16 GMT. Slightly earlier times (4h?) may
    be error markers. NFS rollover

  • 2108-01-01 Sun - MS-DOS : 2^7 years from 1980,
    year field of file date overflows. Win3, Win95, etc. fail

  • 2108-04-01 Sun - 08:04:02 - equivalent of MS-DOS ultimate
    datestamp $FFFFFFFF = 2107-15-31 31:63:62

  • 2111-11-11 Wed - First zero-free YYYYMMDD in M3

  • 2112-12-21 Wed - Doubly palindromic as DDMMYYYY

  • 2114-10-15 Mon - Last Day (99999) for ANSI MUMPS $Horolog
    function customary 5-digit format.

  • 2116-02-07 Fri - 2^32 secs from 1980-01-01 at 06:28:16

  • 2132-08-31 Sun - JD 2500000 starts at noon GMT

  • 2132-09-01 Mon - CMJD 100000; sixth digit needed

  • 2135-01-01 Sat - MMDCCCLXXXVIII : the Roman
    a.u.c.
    date field will be longer than ever before

  • 2137-06-07 Fri - CCSDS 16-bit day code overflow,
    2^16 days from 1958-01-01 (q.v.)

  • 2147-10-28 Sat - TJD +65535 : greatest 16-bit unsigned TJD

  • 2148-01-01 Mon - Rollover of 32-bit signed
    ((YYYY×100+MM)×100+DD)×100+SeqNo format, used for DNS
    serial numbers . Unsigned fails in AD 4295

  • 2149-06-07 Sat - 2^16 days from 1970-01-01. Unsigned overflow?


  • 2154-03-23 Sat - CDMA mobile phone (Americas, S Korea)
    system timer, 36 bits from 1980-01-06 UTC, overflows at 03:28:58.88 UTC
    exactly, ignoring leap seconds.


  • 2156-01-01 Thu - "1900 + a byte" year overflow

  • 2159-06-07 Thu - 2^16 days from 1980-01-01. MS-DOS CLOCK$:
    internal daycount would overflow

  • 2173-10-14 Thu - 100000 days from 1899-12-30






  • 2217-09-28 Sun - CMJD 2^17;
    original
    IBM halfword MJD use would fail

  • 2239-09-29 Sun - Y6k Jewish, at sunset.
    Tishri 1 (Rosh Hashanah), 6000. Messiah expected, now or before

  • 2247-01-01 Fri - Y3K a.u.c. starts (but on which exact date?)

  • 2248-06-03 Sat - Risc OS / NC OS / ARM time rollover
    at 06:57:57.76 : unsigned 2^40 centiseconds from 1900-01-01 00:00:00.
    $0000000000, $FFFFFFFFFF may be markers.

  • 2260-01-01 Sun - The trick of using a two-character year
    representation
    with the first character alphanumeric fails today (98,99,A0,A1..Z9);
    used on HP3000

  • 2286-11-20 Sat - UNIX time_t 10 Gs from 1970,
    at 17:46:40 GMT. JavaScript 10 Tms


  • 2400-02-29 Tue - Will exist - "100-year" rule overridden


  • 2433-04-30 Sat - Last valid day for MMMM-DD notation
    based on 1600. I hear that MMMM-DD is sometimes used where YY-*
    will not serve. Also 2633, 2733






  • 2576-08-08 Thu - CMJD 2^18; see 2217


  • 2698-04-24 Sun - Last Gregorian Easter
    on the same day as Julian Easter (/04/06) of the same-numbered year


  • 2738-11-28 Mon - Day One Million A.D. (approx)

  • 2800-02-29 Tue - First Leap Day difference
    between Gregorian and Greek Greek Orthodox

  • 2877-03-21 Sun - On proposed Aleppo rules, first March 21
    Easter; -03-21 is impossible on Gregorian rules - see
    Note 22

  • 2888-01-01 Thu - MMDCCCLXXXVIII : the Roman A.D. date field
    will be longer than ever before - 14 characters (1888 first to need 13;
    3888 first to need 15; cvt_rome.pas)

  • 2900-01-01 Fri - (Year-1900) exceeds %3d

  • 2999-01-01 Tue - Windows CE FAT fails






  • 3001-01-01 Thu - gmtime() localtime()
    functions in Visual C++ 2008 fail

  • 3003-03-30 Wed - Doubly palindromic as DDMMYYYY

  • 3111-11-11 Sat - All digits odd, first since 1999-11-19;
    cf. 0888-08-28, 2000-02-02

  • 3173-10-13 Sat - Another Mayan Long Count end; world re-created

  • 3199-12-31 Fri - Quattro Pro last day.

  • 3268/01/01 Sun - (Julian date - 3268-01-23 Gregorian)
    start of Second Julian Period - see Calendar FAQ, and
    Peter Meyer.
    28×19×15 years from JD 0
    (Solar Cycle × Metonic Cycle × Roman Indiction)

  • 3400-01-01 Wed - Microsoft's Visual Studio documentation:
    Jet database engine GUIDs algorithm avoids duplicates until AD 3400.
    (AD 1582-10-15 + 2^59×0.1 µs =
    Sat, AD 3409-07-08 22:40:30.3423488 ; perhaps should be
    AD 1582-10-15 + 2^60×0.1 µs =
    Mon, AD 5336-03-31 21:21:00.6846976)


  • 3800-01-01 Wed - (Year mod 1900) diverges from (Year-1900)


  • 3999-12-31 Fri - Last Day for some systems






  • 4000-01-01 Sat - Roman year number is ill-understood
    after MMMCMXCIX

  • 4000-02-29 Tue - Will occur, on the Gregorian calendar.
    I believe that 4000 was not going to be Leap in the USSR, and
    proposed not in Revolutionary France.
    The Greek Orthodox will agree with that, for different reasons

  • 4047-01-01 Tue - As 2147, but for 1900-biased YYYY

  • 4082-12-31 Thu - Last valid date according to a Y2k Glossary
    (first seen at NIST?);
    1582+2500 & Gregorian Calendar error is about 1 day in 2500 years !!

  • 4095-12-31 Sat - MS Word WordBasic date limit

  • 4200-01-01 Wed - Gregorian Easter algorithms containing
    Year/300 or centade/3 are invalid from here -
    Zeller

  • 4295-01-01 Tue - ??? BIND DNS serial number, YYYYMMDDxx,
    stored as 32-bit unsigned, wraps today:
    2^32 = 4294 96 72 96,

  • 4338-11-28 Mon - Cobol-85 Integer day 1000000 -
    exceeds 6-digit field

  • 4500-09-01 Wed - Reported that
    the observed date limit for MS Outlook 2003 is about here

  • 4501-01-01 Sat - 08:00:00 is reportedly a default date-time
    in Microsoft Outlook '98. End of Outlook Calendar

  • 4712-12-31 Tue - Limit of Oracle?

  • 4772-10-13 Fri - Completion of Mayan Great Cycle

  • 5138-11-16 Wed - UNIX time_t 100 Gs from 1970,
    at 09:46:40 GMT. JavaScript 100 Tms

  • 5336-03-31 Sat - see 3400-01-01

  • 6053-01-23 Thu - @ 02:08, 2^31 minutes from 1970-01-01


  • 9006-04-20 Sun - First Easter date for which Knuth's code
    has a problem with Epact :
    J D McC


  • 9999-01-01 Fri - HTTP cacheing fails (or at year's end???)


  • 9999-12-31 Fri - Last date for VBScript, etc.


  • 9999-999 --- - (etc.) a marker date ; = 10001-09-25

  • 9999-99-99 --- - (etc.) a marker date ; = 10007-06-07.





  • 10000-01-01 Sat - Y10K - no
    - many problems recur - e.g. UNIX (etc.) ASCII runs out of YYYY,
    internal ".DBF" format fails?, PC RTC "century" CCYY rollover to 0000


  • 10136-02-16 Thu - @ 04:16, 2^32 minutes
    from 1970-01-01


  • 20874-05-01 Tue - In Y-M-D form,
    Islamic (A.H.) and Gregorian (A.D.) dates agree only from
    20874-05-01 to 20874-05-30, after which the A.H. figures are the
    larger (subject to month-start uncertainty)


  • 22666-12-20 Thu - CJD 10000000 (1E7)
    - JD 10000000 (1E7), from noon GMT


  • 24867-03-24 Thu - 2^23 days from 1899-12-31
    (ICL George 3 - the ICL 1900 was 24-bit; date error?)

  • 24925-03-25 Sun - CCSDS 24-bit day code MSB sets,
    2^23 days from 1958-01-01 (q.v.)

  • 29228-09-14 Thu - at 02:48:05.4775808, 2^63 ×
    100 ns from 0001-01-01.0, .NET epoch

  • 29601-01-01 Mon - Now or next year,

  • 29602-01-01 Tue - Microsoft Windows NT
    file system (NTFS) fails

  • 29940-##-## ??? - New Apple Macs'
    signed 64-bit time fails (OK since BC 30081)

  • 30828-09-14 Thu - Win32, NT : signed (63-bit) time
    rollover at 02:48:05 (100 ns from 1601-01-01, assumed Gregorian)

  • 31086-07-31 Sat - The internal DEC VMS time
    fails at 02:48:05.47. 2^63×100 ns from MJD 0.
    SLAC



  • 32132-##-## ??? - Limit of my dateprox.pas about now;
    my longcalc.pas continues ...
    .

    Dates from here may be less reliable :-


  • 32768-01-01 Mon - Start of Year 2^15,
    16-bit signed integer limit

  • 33658-09-27 Fri - UNIX time_t 1 Ts from 1970,
    at 01:46:40 GMT. JavaScript 1 Pms

  • 34668-01-01 Wed - (Year-1900) + 2^15;
    16-bit struct tm's tm_year fails


  • 38434-08-17 Thu - IBM 370 STCKE instruction latest possible
    rollover @21:30:06.846976 GMT. 1900-01-01 + 2^60 µs


  • 60056-05-28 Sun - Win32, NT : 64-bit time fails
    at 05:36:10 (100 ns from 1601-01-01, assumed Gregorian)

  • 65536-01-01 Wed - 16-bit year code overflows,
    e.g. CCSDS






  • 269078-08-08 Thu - JD 100000000 (1E8), from noon GMT

  • 275760-09-13 Sat - +1E8 days from 1970-01-01 :
    JavaScript Date Object upper limit;
    lower limit is -1E8, -271821 04 20 Tue


  • 685720-11-04 Mon - Second complete cycle of the Jewish
    Calendar starts about now






  • 2733194-11-28 Mon - JD 1000000000 (1E9), from noon GMT

  • 5874898-06-05 Thu - JD 2^31; 32-bit longint(JD) fails

  • 5879611-07-12 Tue - Day 2^31,
    if 0001-01-01 Gregorian is Day 1

  • 5881469-05-28 Fri - CMJD 2^31; 32-bit longint(CMJD) fails






  • 11754508-12-14 Fri - JD 2^32, from noon GMT


  • 27374357-12-21 Sat - JD 10000000000 (1E10), from noon GMT

  • 3E08 approx. - Java time fails - (64-bit signed
    milliseconds from 1970) - AD 292,278,994-08-17 Sun 07:12:55.808 GMT


  • 2147483648-01-01 Wed - Start of Year 2^31,
    32-bit signed integer limit


  • 3E11 approx. - UNIX 64-bit signed time_t fails (seconds
    from 1970) - AD 292,277,026,596-12-04 Sun 15:30:08 GMT (checked)

  • 6E11 approx. - Tower of Hanoi completed
    (at one ring per second) : world ends (again)


  • 5E16 approx. -
    AD 50,505,469,855,528,397-01-15 Wed, JD 2^64, from noon GMT


  • 5E30 approx. -
    AD 5,391,559,471,918,239,497,011,222,876,596-04-18 Mon 16:02:08 GMT,
    UNIX 128-bit signed time_t fails

  • 2E69 approx. -
    AD 1,834,652,618,499,343,590,337,415,746,119,712,509,834,124,421,548,072,260,582,352,567,003,896-01-25
    17:06:08 GMT, UNIX 256-bit signed time_t fails. A Saturday

  • 3.1...E19720 - 31...188450-03-24 Thu 09:06:08 GMT
    - UNIX 65536-bit signed time_t fails

  • 2^1E80 approx. - As there are only about 1E80 particles in the
    observable universe, it has by now become impossible to write the date





Notes










0 :-
To determine CMJD and/or Day-of-Week,
see "mjd_date", "bat_date", "nowminus", and "dateprox" in my
programs directory; "longcalc", which works
in wide-range exact integer seconds, can be used for dates after
Y32k; see also Zeller. For a JavaScript
calendar, JavaScript Calendars and Clocks.


1 :-
"These are machines built by
Apollo Computer, running the DomainOS operating system (DomainOS is
Not Unix, BTW).
The fail date is 14:59 GMT November 2, 1997. At that time,
the highest bit of the 32-bit system clock value will go to '1'.
Some functions may treat this a signed integer, and will give erroneous
values if they use subtraction to calculate elapsed time."

http://www.mitre.org/research/cots/APOLLO_PROBLEM.html

http://www.mitre.org/tech/y2k/docs/DATES.html

http://www.InterWorks.org/Tech/apollonov2/

Thread "Hp's Computers" in news:comp.software.year-2000, Oct'97.

E-mail 2001-04-19 - these are really Apollo machines, from before
the HP takeover in 1998. Good patch info from
Jim Rees;
1997-11-02 14:59 is an erroneous 31-bit rollover;
the genuine 32-bit one is at 2015-09-05 05:58.



2 :-
This set is largely derived from
Randall Bart :-
Erroneous date-form is longer than ever before - field overflow
is possible - null-terminated strings may lose termination.
Date-form occurs when (Year-1900) is printed with %d, %2d or
equivalent, and Year>1999; the "19" may be implicit or explicit;
leading zero may be truncated.
Date strings are here in UK D/M/Y order, or Ordinal Date Y-D.
Note 3.



  • ????-??-?? - The day on which "YY" is changed to "YYYY"

  • 2000-01-01 - "01/01/100" -
    N.B. UNIX tm-year is (Year-1900).

    2000-01-01 - "100-001" -
    (YY overflow & %3d daycount).

  • 2000-01-05 - "Wednesday, 05/01/100"

  • 2000-01-10 - "10/01/100" (format string "%d/%2d/%2d")

  • 2000-01-12 - "Wednesday, 12/01/100"

  • 2000-04-09 - "100-100" (YY overflow & %d daycount)

  • 2000-09-01 - "01 September 19100"

  • 2000-09-06 - "Wednesday, 06 September 19100"

  • 2000-09-10 - "10 September 19100"

  • 2000-09-13 - "Wednesday, 13 September 19100"

  • 2000-09-27 - "Twenty-seventh [of] September 19100"

  • 2000-10-01 - "01/10/100" (format string "%2d/%d/%2d")

  • 2000-10-04 - "Wednesday, 04/10/100"

  • 2000-10-10 - "10/10/100"

  • 2000-10-11 - "Wednesday, 11/10/100"

In languages other than English ...

These may occur in 1999, if the date format has been changed
from YY to YYYY.


3 :-
If in conjunction with time as %d:%d:%d,
full length is not achieved until mid-morning.


4 :-
And non-UNIX 32-bit or compatible C/C++
libraries, etc., which means that the bug can appear in, for example,
DOS programs; I may have found it in ZIP.EXE, from ZIP22X.EXE,
from Info-Zip via FTP sites.
It's been reported in Microsoft MFC CTime class. It's been seen in
control software. It's alleged in Word Perfect 6.1 (for ?).
In UNIX, 03:14:08 is GMT/UTC; in DOS/Win3/Win9x, it's local time.


5 :-
Unisys A Series system date, various
possible year overflows
in 1987, 2003, 2036.


6 :-
Microsoft's help file:
"mktime handles dates in any time zone from midnight, January 1, 1970,
to midnight, February 5, 2036."


7 :-
In 2000 .. 2009, code
using 'printf("Year=%d", yy)'
will print 0 .. 9 rather than 00 .. 09; so
'printf("Year=%d%d", cc, yy)'
will print 200 .. 209.


8 :-
Code using %2d to write
tm_year = Year-1900 to a string, then moving the first two characters
to a print field, will in 2000-9 give 10, 2010-9 give 11, ...


9 :-
Moving yyyy mod 100
(as opposed to yyyy - 1900) into a string with %d format
will in 200X give an X followed by an unmodified byte.


10 :-
Graham E. Kinns wrote (Jul 98) : SNews
has a severe 9th Sep 2001 problem when the decimal representation of time_t
rolls from 9 to 10 digits, breaking the fixed format of the .idx files :(
I believe the same applies to NewsWin.

Richard Clayton wrote in article
<+ypcqNIrBmY4EAt2@turnpike.com> of Thu, 23 Dec 1999 17:48:27 in
news:demon.ip.support.pc that the new SNews 1.31 fixes this.



Philip Guenther (mail, Apr 2001) reports that
"maildir" mail format
usually includes the time_t value in decimal at the start of the filename,
and that this is often used for sorting;
mis-sorts expected from Sep 9.


11 :-
"Both localtime() & time()
are Perl equivalents of the corresponding C functions and use them
internally. But what most Perl programmers probably do not know is
that time(3c) will return (( time_t )-1) if it fails for any reason,
so localtime(-1) will happily return a formatted date string for
'Wednesday December 31, 1969'."
Risks Digest 19.88/7.


12 :-
It's suggested that 2000-01-00 may
lock Pentiums up irrevocably.


13 :-
Calendars, January 1900 and 2000 :-


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 ...

1900 : Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed ...

2000 : Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon ...




Systems that fell back a century
therefore have the weekends two days early.

They will also have Summer Time and many
Church and secular holidays wrong.

Beware of automatic controls.




14 :-
UK and foreign general holidays
near Y2k: my best estimate so far; most foreign ones were guessed
only (RSVP) :-


---------------------- 1999 --------------- ----------- 2000 ------

Dec: 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31, Jan: 01 02 03 04 05

Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed



E+W: W W 1/2 w/e w/e Hol Hol W W Hol w/e w/e Hol W W

NI : <--- as E+W ? --->

Sco: W W W w/e w/e Hol Hol W W Hol w/e w/e Hol Hol W



Irl: W W 1/2 w/e w/e Hol Hol W W W w/e w/e Hol W W



NL : W W W w/e w/e W W W W W w/e w/e W W W



EU : W W ? w/e w/e W? W? W W W w/e w/e W W W



Can: W W 1/2 w/e w/e Hol Hol W W W w/e w/e Hol W W

USA: W W* Hol w/e w/e W* W W W Hol w/e w/e W W W



ISO: ----- Week 51 ---------------- Week 52 --------------- Week 1 ---




1999-09-06 : Updated, esp. Sco, from 1999-2000 IoP diary.

W/h: Working day, though half-holiday for many.

"Holidays aren't uniform over Scotland - different places have
different odd days here and there, but over the new year period they are
relatively standard".

* "In the USA, banks and exchanges will open
Dec 23 and 27, but either may be a state or local holiday in some locales.
Some companies will be closed." URL?

* See also
Annual Holiday Dates.





15 :-
I hear that in Motorola's VERSAdos
Multi-tasking Operating System (UNIX
look-alike), at 31 December 2043, the system clock rolls-over to 1 January
1980, because the 'Telefile' Time/Date 4 byte (32 bit) format is used,
where the MSB 6 bits are used for years from 1980
(i.e. 1980 + 0 - 63 years
expires at 2043). (Telefile format : y6 m4 d5 h5 m6 s6)



This probably obscure operating system is still used by a 1980's
developed SCADA system from Leeds & Northrup (Australia) Pty Ltd of
Sydney (now Foxboro-LN Pty Ltd of Sydney), their LN2068 SCADA System (or
LN700 in USA). It is the current SCADA system used by a number of power
utilities in Australia and New Zealand, Asia and USA.



16 :-
Note that it will be Shabbat
from before dusk 1999-12-31 to after dusk 2000-01-01.
One should not expect observant Jews to want to participate
either in program remediation or in Gentile celebration during that
period (they're probably unenthusiastic about the whole affair, anyway).

Also, they should consider reading 2000-04-30 above as 2000-03-31.


17 :-
The predicted Sunspot
count peak was essentially flat over several months.
Radio noise may affect communications.
Geomagnetic storms may affect the National Grid.
Solar flares peak probably within 2000..2002.




Monash, 1997-04-10?
: "If current projections are correct, the sunspot maximum is currently
estimated to peak in March of the year 2000. It must be noted, however,
that predicting the month of maximum is even less certain than the
sunspot number. The actual month of sunspot maximum could be as early
as January 1999 or as late as June, 2001."

Harjit
S. Ahluwalia, for 1998-04-03
: Abstract : The Planetary Index Ap,
Ohl's Conjecture and the Predicted Size of Solar Cycle 23.



18 :-
I have seen a report
that : Digital Unix had a bug where a
timespec value (seconds and nanoseconds) was being checked to make sure
the nanoseconds field wasn't more than 1 billion; instead, it was checking
the seconds field, and as we hit the (Unix epoch) 1 billion second mark
in 2001, the check would erroneously indicate it was invalid.

(On the "documentation CD-ROM that came with Digital Unix 4.0D";
other Y2k errors were also fixed.)


19 :-
A system which is at the last valid day
of any month MUST roll over at midnight to the first day of the next month.
It SHOULD NOT (but, I think, not MUST NOT) be possible to set to a day
in any month after the last valid day (and likewise before the first),
and a system SHOULD if possible be designed not to allow this;
but, if such a setting has been made, it is not at all clear what the
setting should become at subsequent midnights - it's unlikely to be right,
anyway, and it may be better to leave the error blatant and unambiguous
by just incrementing the day field.


20 :-
The exact interpretation
of the sources, and its representation on the Gregorian scale,
are not necessarily always agreed.



Anno Mundi started on BC 3761/10/07 Monday (beginning at
the previous Sunset [in Jerusalem] or 6 p.m.), Julian Calendar.

Whitaker's Almanac (1989; Pocket 2000) gives the epoch
for chronology as Oct 7, 3761 BC.
I make that CMJD -2052003, BC 3761 09 07 Gregorian, Monday.
It is numbered as Day 2.

Remy Landau's
Hebrew Calendar site;
be careful with its notation (Proleptic Gregorian Astronomical), particularly
before AD 1. My The Hebrew Calendar.



21 :-


(1) At NIST, USA : Ancient Calendars.

(2) At webexhibits, via
Calendars
through the Ages
,

& Doggett,
Calendars.

(3) At ScienceWorld :
Weisstein.

(4) Thor Heyerdahl, Early Man and the Ocean, ISBN 0 04 572022 3,
p.335 : "The zero date 4 Ahau 2 Cumhu .. our system .. 12 August
3113 BC". Gregorian?


22 :-


According to James Ussher, Anglican Archbishop of Armagh (1581-1656) in
a posthumous edition (of Annales veteris testamenti a prima mundi
origine deducti
, 1650), The Annals of the World, iv, of 1658
: the Creation of the World occurred at the Equinox in October of BC
4004 (Julian). Note that Ussher seems, like others, to consider
the evening of a day to be what we would now call the previous evening.



Ussher wrote : ... from the evening
ushering in the first day of the World, to that midnight which began the
first day of the Christian era, there was 4003 years, seventy days, and
six temporarie hours
- and AD 0001-01-01 0h minus 4003y 70d 6h is
BC 4004-10-22 18h, i.e. 6 p.m. of Saturday 22nd October, BC
4004. That makes the first full day Sunday 23rd (Genesis, 1,5;
the seventh day, of rest, is the Jewish Sabbath). Garden of Eden Time,
presumably.



The date and time are often misquoted as the 23rd or 26th,
and as 9 a.m.



The date, or the year, is often given in old Bibles :
_
_
_


23 :-
World Council of Churches (Aleppo 1997),
Towards
a Common Date of Easter
- also see
Claus Tøndering's Calendar FAQ,
and The Date of Easter Sunday








Coda




Doubtless I've missed a lot ... Leap seconds may be omitted above.
Each "999" problem may be accompanied by a "1000" problem, and so on.
For over three decades after 2000, it will not be possible to
discriminate between YY/MM/DD and DD/MM/YY by inspection.




Cory Hamasaki (kiyoinc@ibm.net) wrote:

"... EXPDT=98000 or EXPDT=99000 or EXPDT=99365 which are fun dates, ..."
which I think are specials in an expiry date field
on some misbegotten systems ...




Also critical - the start of any regular period which first includes
2000 (the Jo Anne Effect) - for example corporate FY
1999-07-01..2000-06-30; or includes 1999. Note that while the UK
national FY starts on April 6th, UK companies can choose their own FY,
and I understand an April 1st start is common. Also that some bodies
number their FY with its start year, some with its end year; the
rational ones will, unless starting on Jan 1, use for example 1998-99 or
1999-2000 - which is a longer string.




When checking, verify Day-of-Week,
especially across the Feb-Mar transitions, and at the ends of 2000.




Foreigners, beware side-effects of peculiar calendars, and
North-South differences. Summer Time (Daylight Saving
Time, DST) rules mean that time errors may arise from Date or
Day-of-Week errors.




Any other date which used to seem far in the future (or
past) may have been used as a "special" marker. Consider YY/MM/DD with
YY=MM=DD≤12.




For many dates bearing an arithmetical relationship with the start of
2000, there may be corresponding problems with dates bearing the same
relationship with 2038-01-19 (or other range-end dates) - cf.
2008-01-19.






Failure Modes




At
MSU
.








Repeated Risks




Some listed here as Y2k hay have correponding
Y2038 risks.







Y2k-Type






  • 20#0-01-01 - Likely date windowing critical points.

  • 2000-01-(01-M) - M days to 2000,
    for any special short-term M (30 days, ...).

  • ####-01-01 - N years to/from 2000 -
    possible problems with N-year subscriptions.

  • ####-##-## - N years to/from your
    FY 2000 - fiscal year 2000 (Jo Anne effect).

  • ANY date with a memorable pattern early or late in the
    1900's/2000's may have been chosen in the past as a "signal" date.

  • In fact, any digit or field rollover may fail; I have read
    of an OS that, at midnight, rolled the last digit of the
    9th, 19th, 29th of the month from "9" to "A".

  • TJD = 0 recurs every ten kilodays from 1968-05-24.






Leaps in Date/Time










Summer Time




Summer Time
- BST/DST - Daylight Saving Time :-






  • Alterations,
    temporary or permanent, in Rules may cause difficulty
    or confusion; the US has new Rules from 2007.

  • Misunderstandings,
    of Rules may occur; the US 2007 change has been described as "Spring,
    3 weeks earlier", which is true in 2007, but only in 3 years out of 7.

  • Spring :-


    • Clocks go forward in EU & NA (and ZA, AU, NZ, etc., ?).

    • One hour's worth of civil time is omitted,
      timed events may be skipped.

    • EU-NA time differences change, previously for about a week,
      but for three or four weeks from 2007; beware auto-changers.


  • Spring And Autumn :-


    • North-South time differences change, perhaps twice.

    • Brief time difference changes occur within NA;
      their zones ripple-change at 0200h clock time,
      whereas all EU changes simultaneously at 0100h GMT.

    • The USA clock change is at 0200h clock time, the UK at
      0100h GMT; so do not be surprised if systems change an hour late.
      My Win98 1st Edn + MSIE 4 changed at 0200h GMT, as was shown
      by JavaScript Calendars and Clocks.

    • See 2001-04-01 - the effect probably repeated, on average,
      every seven years.

    • Dual-boot systems may dual-change.

    • Beware possible effects on apparent Windows file timestamps;
      Risks Digest 22.35/10.


  • Autumn :-


    • Clocks go back in EU & NA (and ZA, AU, NZ, etc., ?).

    • One hour's worth of civil time is repeated, timed events may be
      duplicated. VCRs (Risks Digest
      19.43, #11/19), ATMs (ibid. #12/19), birth times
      (RD 24.92 #9/13), ... can get confused.

    • EU-NA time differences change, currently for a few hours.

    • AIUI, the first version of Windows 95
      (cf. ibid. 13,14/19) sets the clock back whenever
      it thinks that the clock has reached 2 a.m. on the day in
      question, not just on the first occasion.

    • Reported that some Windows 95 applied
      out-of-date EU/CET Autumn rules.


  • UNIX CRON is OK; periodic jobs should not be controlled by local
    time. Or should they?






Year Rollover




Old DOS GAWK and C Library week numbers - see 2002-12-30 and
Batch; affects many years.




Apparently, systems for NASA's shuttles may have inadequate
provision for the Year Number to change during flight, so that
2007-01-01 would be 2006-366 - "YERO (Year End Rollover)".







Easter




In some countries, the dates of certain public holidays are governed
by that of Easter Sunday. Problems may occur when those coincide with
other important dates, such as the beginning or end of a financial
year.




Other faiths may give similar problems.







Appointments Scheduling




Some "Diary" software is wrongly influenced by
Summer Time or
Time Zone,
using absolute where it should use local, or vice versa.
A regular 0900h meeting in Mar-Apr may shift to 0800h.
A Londoner, having entered a meeting for 1000h in Paris,
may find on arrival that it is now listed as at 1100h. It is unsafe
to rely, in today's world, on a time of dubious offset from GMT.







Specific Systems






  • HMG Red Tape Change Days, April 6 & October 1.

  • GPS rollover every 1024 weeks, less LeapSecs.

  • VMS TODR clock needs annual re-basing before 466 days
    (2^32 × 10 ms) from previous Jan 1st, or next reboot
    will hiccup. "Information about the VMS TODR (time of day register)
    problem is in section 20.5.2.1 of the OpenVMS System Manager's Manual".

  • Windows 98 - any year/day end - The Sunday Times and the
    BBC
    report that, at the end of each year, Windows 98 gains
    two days or loses one. Microsoft agreed
    saying that this only occurs if Windows 98
    is started within a particular but defined second of the last minute
    of the year; a fix is being developed. See
    here?

    But Risks Digest 19.92 #11
    says that it can occur any day,
    if one boots during a critical five seconds near midnight.

  • Some Microsoft Outlook Calendars have holidays such as US Memorial Day,
    UK Spring Bank Holiday, UK Late Summer Holiday on the fourth Monday
    of the month, rather than on the last one as it should be - so being a
    week early three years in seven. See 1999 above; I only give samples.

  • Reported that UNIX systems often contain that "Fourth-is-Last" error.

  • Reported that the Delphi IDE may misjudge file state if the state of
    Summer Time changes during use. Other IDEs, etc.?







Periodic Events







Critical Periods




In general, these may start, and therefore finish, at any time.
They are based on counting in units of time : note that it is not
uncommon to count in fractional units, such as tenths of a second.




While not necessarily significantly repetitive, a system with
an uninitialised or mis-set calendar or clock may reach a significant
moment, Y2k or otherwise, at any time.




Preferred financial periods are likely to be country-dependent -
40-year term loans, 30, 25, 20-year mortgages, etc.





































































































Multiples of Units of Time
YearsDayshh:mm:ss.sssDurationText##
--09:06:082^15 secondsSigned WORD wraps1
--18:12:162^16 secondsUnsigned WORD wraps2
-24.8520:31:23.6482^31 millisecondsSigned DWORD wraps3
-49.7117:02:47.2962^32 millisecondsUnsigned DWORD wraps4
-248.5513:13:56.4802^31 centisecondsSolaris; Galaxy?5
4.911762.000:00:002^8 weeksGPS rollover6
31.9011650.820:16:002^24 minutes7
68.05-03:14:082^31 secondsSigned time_t wraps8
136.10-06:28:162^32 secondsUnsigned time_t wraps9
179.4365536.000:00:002^16 days10





  • 1. -

  • 2. -

  • 3. Windows GetTickCount is a DWORD of milliseconds from boot.

  • 4. Windows GetTickCount. Also used in Internet RFCs.

    According to Microsoft, Windows 95/98 could [Q216641] hang;
    VTDAPI.VXD needs fixing.
    The problem apparently was fixed in Windows 98 Second Edition and
    in Windows Millennium.
    (see Risks Digest 23.53/1,2,3)

  • 5. Report seen : Solaris 2.x hangs when lbolt, which is
    zeroed at boot and increments every centisecond, flips its MSB.
    Sun bug ref is 4032974; fixed in 2.6, patches for earlier 2.x.

    Also reported - and denied
    (see Risks Digest 19.93) -
    that this failure, in the ground controls,
    killed the Galaxy IV "pager" satellite in May 1998.

  • 6. GPS. See 2003-11-28 above.

  • 7. -

  • 8. -

  • 9. -

  • 10. -








Other Periods




These may be of interest, but are unlikely to be of much technical
importance.






  • 8 years : (octaeteris Lunar Cycle) - phases of Moon repeat,
    approximately - 8×12+3 = 99 lunar months

  • 15 years : Roman Indiction (fiscal)

  • 19 years : (Metonic/Lunar Cycle) - phases of Moon repeat,
    approximately - 19×12+7 = 235 lunar months

  • 28 years : Julian Calendar (Solar Cycle) - days repeat

  • 50 years : Biblical Jubilee -
    7×7+1 or 3×3 + 4×4 + 5×5 years

  • 400 years : Gregorian Calendar - days repeat

  • 532 years : Julian Easter (19×28) - repeats.
    "Great Paschal Cycle", "Dionysian Cycle", "Victorian Cycle"

  • 2880000 days (20×20×20×18×20) :
    Mayan Long Count - c. 7885.63 years

  • 7980 years : Julian Period (15×19×28)

  • 49033 years (approx) : Julian/Gregorian seasons match

  • 689472 Hebrew years : Calendar repeats (36288×19)

  • 5700000 years : Gregorian Easter (19×25×30×400) - repeats

  • 39900000 years : Combined Julian & Gregorian Easter?


  • 5255890855047 days = 14390140400 years Gregorian
    = 14389970112 years Hebrew - Dual Secular (no Easter) calendar repeats ?

  • 74896444684419750 days = 205059500700000 years Gregorian
    = 205057074096000 years Hebrew - Dual Religious (Easter) calendar repeats ?
















© Dr J R Stockton, near London, UK.

All Rights Reserved.


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is maintained by me.


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