years ago, as the year 2,000 approached, many worried that computer glitches caused by the date switch would disrupt society.
Twenty-five years ago, while the world was waiting on edge, the potential Y2K crisis came and went without any major failures ...
A quarter-century after burying a plastic pipe stuffed with notes and mementos, old friends in Silver Spring discover that ...
In the lead up to January 1, 2000, television reporters rabidly covered doomsayers’ predictions about technology’s downfall.
Planes didn’t fall from the sky on Jan. 1, 2000. A technology reporter who wrote a front-page article early that morning ...
It's not clear how long it will take to fix the problem, but in the meantime deputies and dispatchers must use radios instead ...
Happy New Year and welcome to 2025. It's been 25 years since the turn of the millennium when we were warned that our computer ...
When panic gripped the globe on New Year's Eve, 1999, newspaper archives show some Treasure Coast residents equally ...
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 ...
People who stocked up on supplies of canned goods and other foods for the Y2K computer crisis are being urged to donate them ...
The U.S. spent tens of billions of dollars solving the computer glitch, but Y2K also sparked untrue hysteria about planes ...
A quarter century ago, as 1999 neared 2000, Y2K was all the buzz. A look back at how The Tennessean covered the event.