Although I progressed from my childhood into my teens in the 90s, l don’t retain much memory of the internet back then as l had no exposure to it.

      • ripcord@lemmy.world
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        18 hours ago

        Computers were going to crash. The ones most at risk potentially didn’t talk to the Internet (but ran core systems, including core banking, airline, defense, etc systems). Fortunately - except very very few cases - they were all fixed before y2k. Since it was an incredibly well-publicized, fixable problem that everyone mobilized on.

        The much bigger impact to the nascient Internet was the dot com bubble burst not too long after. Then what REALLY changed things was smartphones.

        • DomeGuy@lemmy.world
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          17 hours ago

          It wasn’t that computers would crash. Its that they might treat midnight Jan 1 as a hundred years before almist-midnight Dec 31, instead of one minute later.

          Really critical things like airplanes would probably be OK, but your savings account would suddenly be drained thanks to 100 years of negative interest, while your credit card would sudddy go from owing $1000 to having $60,000 in available credit.

          Y2K, if no one had done anything, might have ended capitalism. Assong that there were no nuclear launch systems with a date-based “don’t shoot” dead-king switch.

          • ripcord@lemmy.world
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            15 hours ago

            Some might crash. We absolutely fixed bugs like that.

            There were lots and lots of failure modes.