From: 71231 DOT 104 AT compuserve DOT com (Richard Slobod) Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.djgpp Subject: Re: Why did ID choose DJGPP for Quake? Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2000 23:16:57 GMT Organization: Deja.com - Before you buy. Lines: 36 Message-ID: <85dp8r$ulv$1@nnrp1.deja.com> References: NNTP-Posting-Host: 208.242.203.103 X-Article-Creation-Date: Mon Jan 10 23:16:57 2000 GMT X-Http-User-Agent: Mozilla/4.6 [en] (Win98; U) X-Http-Proxy: 1.0 x28.deja.com:80 (Squid/1.1.22) for client 208.242.203.103 X-MyDeja-Info: XMYDJUIDr_slobod To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com DJ-Gateway: from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp Reply-To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com In article , "Damian Yerrick" wrote: > "Eli Zaretskii" wrote: > > On Wed, 5 Jan 2000, Kalum Somaratna aka Grendel wrote: > > > I might be wrong but I don't think there would be any on this > > > newsgroup using a 386+287 for serious work in 2000. > > 386 PCs? No. Their BIOSes probably have the century bug. Possibly, yes. Probably? Not necesarily. Many older computers have BIOSes that handle dates past 1999 just fine (_most_ of them in my experience, but I admit that that's not a large enough sample to be statistically valid). Also, note that the age of the machine doesn't really relate to the chances of it being Y2K compliant. There's only been a real impetus to make sure that everything's Y2K compliant within the last several years. Anything older than that, regardless of exact age, has a roughly equal chance of having Y2K problems, whether it's a 386, 486, or even an older Pentium. (In fact, the one machine I've run into whose BIOS was completely incapable of handling a year 2000 date _was_ an older Pentium. The various other old machines -- just about all of them older than the Pentium -- at worst failed rollover but were fine once manually set.) For that matter, having a Y2K-incompliant BIOS doesn't even remotely render the system unusable. There are various solutions for getting the OS' date set correctly even if the BIOS can't provide it properly. (Mind you, I agree with Kalum Somaratna's above statement; chances are that no one here is using something as ancient as a 386 for serious work simply for performance reasons.) Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/ Before you buy.