We're being short-sighted
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zink@programming.devreplied to chetradley@lemm.ee last edited by
Well the USA is on Earth so obviously the earth calendar is the default.
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donkter@lemmy.worldreplied to dependencyinjection@discuss.tchncs.de last edited by
That has forever been the fallacy.
The poor won't die in the apocalypse leaving only the rich behind. The poor will die, and the rich will be faced with the harsh reality that they needed an army of poor working under them to sustain themselves, leading them to all die within the generation.
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Don't worry, we'll be extinct soon, hopefully. Maybe even before int32_t runs out. Unfortunately not soon enough to stop the humans impact on earth before the worst damage is done.
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pfm@scribe.disroot.orgreplied to The Picard Maneuver last edited by
I wonder how Voyagers' code represents time
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dovah@lemmy.worldreplied to pfm@scribe.disroot.org last edited by
It just counts up, according to this answer.
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dogwater@lemmy.worldreplied to donkter@lemmy.world last edited by
That's true until it isn't. Automation is on its way. Marching ever onward.
The factory I work in built a new building this year that employs 1/4 of the workers as the next newest one and does 2.5x the output.
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Still set by London
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Programmers dealing with the timezones of asymmetric period binary and trinary star systems once we go interstellar
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I'll let you in on a secret.
Humanity and the animals that we like will get through just fine.
Humans in general and the vast majority of biodiversity will be fucked.
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zeca@lemmy.eco.brreplied to donkter@lemmy.world last edited by
just to nitpick, they said the "poorest", not the poor in general.
The poorest are the most vulnerable, and, I suppose, not absolutely crucial for the ruling class. -
letsdothis@lemmy.worldreplied to The Picard Maneuver last edited by
"Were being short-sighted"
Lol Picard maneuver. Pretty sure your opinion wasn't asked for.
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toddestan@lemm.eereplied to rusty@lemmy.ca last edited by
I've been curious about that myself. On one hand, it still seems far away. On the other hand, it's a bit over 13 years away and I have gear actively in use that's older than that today.
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a9cx34udp4zz0@lemmy.worldreplied to The Picard Maneuver last edited by
Actual programmers wondering why this joke doesn't mention 65535...
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finitebanjo@lemmy.worldreplied to The Picard Maneuver last edited by
More of a front end issue actually, almost all time is just stored as the number of seconds since 00:00:00 Jan 1 1970.
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croquette@sh.itjust.worksreplied to finitebanjo@lemmy.world last edited by
And it's represented as a 64 bits value, which is over 500 billions years.
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randint@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyzreplied to ERROR: Earth.exe has crashed last edited by
and I think the ROC government in exhile in Taiwan stopped using it.
Actually it is still used. It's everywhere in legal documents, government documents and stuff. Though people more commonly say 2024 instead of ๆฐๅ113ๅนด.
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mystikincarnate@lemmy.careplied to croquette@sh.itjust.works last edited by
64 bits value
.... About that...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Year_2038_problem -
smeenz@lemmy.nzreplied to mystikincarnate@lemmy.ca last edited by
That's the 32 bit timestamp
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genosseflosse@feddit.orgreplied to dogwater@lemmy.world last edited by
You still need loaders, drivers, retailers to get anything to the customer. A lot of rich ski and holiday towns can't staff the stores and Cafe's, because the employees can't afford to pay rent in the same towns
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mystikincarnate@lemmy.careplied to The Picard Maneuver last edited by
In this thread: mostly people that don't know how timekeeping works on computers.
This is already something that we're solving for. At this point, it's like 90% or better, ready to go.
See: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Year_2038_problem
Time keeping, commonly, is stored as a binary number that represents how many seconds have passed since midnight (UTC) on January 1st 1970. Since the year 10,000 isn't x seconds away from epoch (1970-01-01T00:00:00Z), where x is any factor of 2 (aka 2^x, where x is any integer), any discrepancies in the use of "year" as a 4 digit number vs a 5 digit number, are entirely a display issue (front end). The thing that does the actual processing, storing and evaluation of time, gives absolutely no fucks about what "year" it is, because the current datetime is a binary number representing the seconds since epoch.
Whether that is displayed to you correctly or not, doesn't matter in the slightest. The machine will function even if you see some weird shit, like the year being 99 100 because some lazy person decided to hard code it to show "99" as the first two digits, then take the current year, subtract 9900, and display whatever was left (so it would show the year 9999 as "99", and the year 10000 as year "100") so the date becomes 99 concatenated with the last two (now three) digits left over.
I get that it's a joke, but the joke isn't based on any technical understanding of how timekeeping works in technology.
The whole W2k thing was a bunch of fear mongering horse shit. For most systems, the year would have shown as "19-100", 1900, or simply "00" (or some variant thereof).