Since the rest of this has nothing to do with routers, for Randy: clock set 00:00:00 1 jan 2000
I don't but its an opportunity to sell the client. And if you don't test it I recommend you don't get quoted saying it doesn't matter unless you want a lawsuit if anything happens.
Customers want everything in writing to be Year 200 compliant or not having any affect on their operation and in many cases regulators are mandating it in writing.
Funny how the customer wants it to be Y2K compliant, but they have no problem with the rest of the software licenses that says "In no event does xxxxx warrant that the Software is error free or that Customer will be able to operate the Software without problems or interruptions." Quoted directly from a very well-known vendor's license agreement, who has issued big press releases about their Year 2000 Compliance program. Its even going to be 'certified.' Whoopie! How about a challange, instead of issuing press releases about the Y2K compliance, just remove the above sentence from your license agreement and stand behind your product. If something fails, does it really matter why it fails? The problem is it failed. Some users have become so accustomed to using CTL-ALT-DEL, they think its a normal part of the software function. Why do I have this feeling on January 3, 2000 (fortunately Jan 1, 2000 is a Saturday), the same number of users are going to get the 'blue-screen of death' as on every other day between now and then; but on the CBS evening news Dan Rather's replacement will gravely report that millions of computers got the 'blue screen of death' because its the year 2000. -- Sean Donelan, Data Research Associates, Inc, St. Louis, MO Affiliation given for identification not representation