Planes didn’t fall from the sky on Jan. 1, 2000. A technology reporter who wrote a front-page article early that morning ...
If you’re of millennial age or older (or if you’ve seen a certain comedy-horror film now in theaters), you’re likely already familiar with the “year 2000 problem,” better known by the moniker Y2K.
It has been 25 years since Y2K fears peaked on New Year's Eve 1999. What was the issue? How was the crisis averted? And did ...
For people over the age of 30, the Y2K panic of 1999 was a real concern. It seems silly now, but for many people a quarter ...
Kyle Mooney, co-writer, director and star of A24's Y2K, talks about making a New Year's Eve classic and what he watched ...
New Year's Eve, FOX 2 was covering the biggest story of the year: a new millenium and a fear that massive computer ...
The U.S. spent tens of billions of dollars solving the computer glitch, but Y2K also sparked untrue hysteria about planes ...
When panic gripped the globe on New Year's Eve, 1999, newspaper archives show some Treasure Coast residents equally ...
People feared the computer glitch would mean "the end of the world as we know it." Thankfully, Y2K didn't live up to the hype ...
An evening timelapse shot at a beach in North Vancouver, British Columbia. 85-year-old Jack Kabvitok says he was born in an ...
On New Year's 25 years ago, there was concern over a potential computer problem labeled "Y2K." The potential problem: Computers didn't use four numbers for the year. Instead, they used two numbers. So ...
In the leadup to New Year's Day in 2000, there was a lot of concern, a bit of tension and some curiosity all for one reason: ...