I received this letter. I can't argue with it.
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You and I are both extremely skeptical that companies are doing as much Y2K repair as their PR people claim.
Here's a way to get dramatic anecdotal evidence in 10 minutes or less: Pick up the Sunday edition of any metro newspaper. Turn to the classified ads and see how many Y2K-related want ads you can find. Most typical number: Zero.
Even if you grant the benefit of a doubt and assume that any ad that mentions a legacy language (COBOL, RPG, Jovial, APL, and so on) is a disguised Y2K situation, you'll count no more than one or two ads.
To put this in perspective, look for ads that mention Web-based or Java-based programming. You'll see several.
When you can't find more than one or two Y2K ads in a five-pound Sunday paper, you know what it means: Most companies are doing nothing.
If millions of companies WERE doing serious repair work, the metro papers would be running entire classified SECTIONS on Y2K.
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