If Set 1 was truly empty, I'd agree with you.

-Rasmus

On Thu, 26 Sep 2002, Sascha Schumann wrote:

> > My worry is that this change appears to have absolutely no positive
> > aspects and only negative potential.  We know browsers exist that cannot
> > handle 4-digit years.  Early WebTV boxes don't, early Netscape don't.  We
> > do not know of any browsers that cannot handle 2-digit years.  Hence I
> > fail to see the upside with this change.
>
>     Well, let me restate that pure existance of software does not
>     matter.  I still have NT 4.0 with a MSIE 2 in the desk -- it
>     exists, but you don't design applications for it anymore.  It
>     is the actual use which counts.  For further confirmation of
>     this, you just need to look at major web stores such as
>     amazon.com.  They are not afraid of making the move to
>     4-digit years.
>
>     Let us consider two sets
>
>     1: Browsers in use which handle only 2-digit years
>     2: Browsers in use which handle only 4-digit years properly
>
>     While both sets may be empty at this time, a safe and natural
>     prediction is that the size of the second set will increase.
>     The first one will not change and remain at 0 for obvious
>     reasons.
>
>     And therefore I've introduced this proactive change.
>
>     - Sascha
>


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