The Year 2000 Problem

Martin (person)
 

Y2k (pronounced "Y to K") stood for lots of overtime and heavy work pressure. Not everybody joined the endeavour however. Some application software still show the date e.g. 2002-05-03 (3rd of May, 2002) as 05/03/102 or in similar elusive formats. — Please do not take the following too seriously (no offence intended), it simply shows how we tried to cope with it all. It was mailed to me by a friend in Canada who picked it up from the Internet.


Memorandum

To:

Boss

From:

Blondie

Re:

Changing Calendars from Y2k

         I hope that I haven't misunderstood your instructions because,
to be honest, none of this Y to K problem made much sense to me.
At any rate, I have finished the conversion of all of the months
on all of the company calendars for next year. The calendars have
returned from the printer and are ready to be distributed with the
following new months:

Januark
Februark
Mak
Julk

I also changed all the days of each week to:

Sundak
Mondak
Tuesdak
Wednesdak
Thursdak
Fridak
Saturdak

We are now Y to K compliant.

Have a nice dak!!

Blondie


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Last modified on 2010-05-04 06:15 UTC