we've had y-2-k, when the first digit rolled over. now we've got s-1-g where we gain a WHOLE NEW DIGIT. pandelirium shall ensue -- there will be riots in the streets! the home shopping channel will stock only batteries!
$ perl -e 'print scalar localtime 1_000_000_000' Sat Sep 8 20:46:40 2001 that is, on "Sun Sep 9 01:46:40 2001 GMT" (i'm in CDT) we will have reached ONE BILLION SECONDS (a whole gigasecond) since Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 GMT. here's my plan: - all us debian folk invest in battery companies and canned food companies - we call dan rather and barbara walters and imply that this might be a problem, but not if you hire a debian sysadmin: "luckily this new-digit syndrome is restricted to only those folks who use base ten. (for example, 1 decimal billion is 33531600616 in base 7 or 12c23a19c in base 13, and 55e1n2g in base 24.) that should help ameliorate the problem for the rest of us." tech talk scares many people and drives the price of our stocks sky high. - our friends in the media, who are interested only in informing us of the facts, start a global panic where businesses hire us as experts to address the situation - we reap fat consulting fees where the only thing we spend time on in our presentation materials (economical use of time) - we cash in our stock and spend half the proceeds on frivolous stuff (food, shelter) and the other half on a smear campaign against the dark lord of the northwest... whaddya think? we've got a bit more than a week to pull it off... -- DEBIAN NEWBIE TIP #56 from Vineet Kumar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> : Troubled by DOS-FORMAT OR MAC-FORMAT TEXT FILES? Here's another way to deal with those troublesome ^M characters: a simple tr -d '\015' < dos.file > reg.file should do the trick. While we're on the subject, a Mac file can be converted with tr '\015' '\012' < mac.file > reg.file You can do all your CR/LF translations with tr as long as you can remember that macs use CRs, *nices use LFs, and DOS uses CR+LF. Also see http://newbieDoc.sourceForge.net/ ...