Charities Offered Help With Millennium Bug
May 20, 1999 | Read Time: 1 minute
A Seattle non-profit group called NPower, which provides technology assistance to other charities, is organizing a “Y2K Day of Service,” during which more than 200 volunteers will help 140 local non-profit groups test their computers and software for possible year-2000 problems.
The year-2000 problem arises because much of the computer hardware and software still in use today identifies years by the last two digits only. Those older systems may malfunction when faced with the year 2000.
The volunteers will be trained to use software to test for Y2K problems and to generate a report for each non-profit group that lists which of its machines and software programs cannot handle the year change, as well as possible solutions for the problems.
One of the software programs will also allow NPower to create a data base of all the problems identified at the participating charities, which the group will use to design free seminars and other follow-up projects to help non-profit groups solve the problems.
FOR MORE INFORMATION: Contact NPower, The Nickerson Marina Building, 1080 West Ewing Place, Suite 300, Seattle 98119; (206) 286-8880; http://www.npower.org.