- Two magnetic housing units for the dual micro singularities
- An electron injection manifold to alter mass and gravity micro singularities
- A cooling and X-ray venting system
- Gravity sensors, or a variable gravity lock
- Four main cesium clocks
- Three main computer units According to the posts, the device was installed in the rear of a 1967 Chevrolet Corvette convertible and later moved to a 1987 truck having four-wheel drive.Titor described the time machine on several occasions. In an early post, he described it as a "stationary mass, temporal displacement unit powered by two top-spin, dual positive singularities", producing a "standard off-set Tipler sinusoid". The earliest post was more explicit, saying it contained the following:
That's pretty awesome.
Many systems store system time as a single number representing the number of seconds since January 1, 1970. The way this number is usually stored in memory means that it has a maximum number - 2,147,483,647 in this case, which corresponds to 03:14:07 UTC on Tuesday, 19 January 2038. After this time, when a system adds extra seconds onto this timestamp, they will wrap around to the negative equivalent (and since there's no such thing as negative seconds, this will cause pretty major issues).
This just reminded me that the Y2K hysteria was 14 years ago. Damn.
The year 2038 is way more serious than the 2k year problem, because the latter was mainly a limitation of user space apps, the year 2038 on the other hand affects operating systems and hardware, and, specially on embedded systems, it will be very hard or impossible to fix.
Well, we do have 25 years to just say, "Make all programs compatible with the following standard as well as Unix time."
Nope. You're wrong. Power is going to go out, all nukes will launch, society will collapse as we know it, dogs and cats living together, mass hysteria.
Did you make this up? Because throwing in "dogs and cats living together" is brilliant.
No, it's from Ghost Busters, Bill Murray line. Can't take credit. It's when they are talking about all the bad things happening, and all the guys are mentioning different biblical bad things that are going to happen, and he finishes their sentence with "... dogs and cats living together, MASS HYSTERIA!"
Here it is : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9S4cldkdCjE#t=02m15s
Not really 25 years: many epoch problems occur before the switchover. For example, one of the (few) serious Y2K issues affected a supermarket chain, I hear, in the mid-1990s: a shipping crate full of tins of corned beef arrived off the boat from Argentina, and was checked in to their warehouse. Following the prompts on their automated computer system, the warehouse employee put the "sell by" date of the crates of beef into the computer, and then had a forklift truck driver store them. Tinned corned beef lasts for a while, so the sell-by dates weren't until 2001 or something. The computer only used two-digit dates, so the year entered was "01". The following morning, the computer did it's morning processing, and discovered that the corned beef that it had in stock had expired back in 1901 (which is how it interpreted the "01" it had been given the previous day). So it sent a memo to the forklift driver and had them throw out all of the corned beef. Then it realised that corned beef stocks were low, so it ordered ANOTHER shipping crate of corned beef from Argentina. (thankfully somebody noticed before the second lot was thrown out) No idea how much truth there is in that story, but I can imagine that it's at least partially genuine. In any case: in a similar way, the year 2038 problem will affect systems well before 2038: it might already be taking effect! Think about things like prison databases (which may record somebody's release date as being in 2039, which will be translated as ~1901, instead, or not understood at all), for example. Hopefully somebody's sanity-checking that data!
Alright, let's call it 15 years. Definitely we have some time.