Newsstand - Y2K bug hits airliner over Atlantic




Austman
Jan 1, 00, 1:31 am
There HAD to be at least one story somewhere. And there was ...

Y2K bug hits airliner over Atlantic

Source: AFP | Published: Saturday January 1, 11:51 AM

WASHINGTON, Dec 31 - A year 2000 computer problem occurred today on board a British Airways Boeing 777 flying from London to Boston, an AFP correspondent among the passengers reported.

The incident happened at 1140 GMT, less than one hour after the plane took off from London's Heathrow airport, and when it was already passing over the Atlantic.

Passengers heard the pilot of BA flight 213 say, 'We have a millennium bug problem. We will switch to manual system. This will interrupt the TV transmission.'

The announcement caused surprise but no apparent panic among those on board.

The television monitors in the passenger cabin shut off for nearly three minutes.

The flight continued on to Boston without any further explanation or subsequent incident.


Austman
Jan 1, 00, 2:22 am
A report that's difficult to believe.

BA213 LHR-BOS 09:45a-12:25p

The flight didn't even pass the millennium shift.

BA's press release:

Bubbly all round at 35,000 ft at midnight

London, January 1, 2000: Some 2,000 British Airways passengers toasted the new millennium at 35,000 ft with the airline reporting problem-free flights for all 15 of its aircraft in the skies as Big Ben struck midnight.

The £100 million the airline allocated to swat the Millennium Bug appears to have been well spent, with no Y2K associated flight problems reported worldwide.

Nonetheless, monitoring teams and computer experts were among the 5,000 employees on duty overnight, to cover any contingencies that might have occurred, including around a hundred in the airline’s worldwide command centre at Heathrow.

Every passenger on board at midnight was presented with a special certificate to mark the occasion and offered a glass of champagne to toast the new millennium, as captains on each flight announced the dawn of the new year.

To help create the right atmosphere, every aircraft had bags of party hats and other goodies on board, and cabin crew ran draws with tickets for rides on the British Airways London Eye millennium wheel and visits to the Millennium Dome as prizes.

The 15 flights in the air at midnight GMT were from Heathrow to Cape Town, Hong Kong, Johannesburg, Tokyo and New York, from Gatwick to Harare, Mauritius and Nairobi, to Heathrow from Cape Town, Hong Kong (two flights) and Johannesburg (two flights), and to Gatwick from Barbados and Nairobi.

Bob Ayling, Chief Executive of British Airways, said: “My thanks go to everyone at British Airways who worked on the night and whose dedication and commitment ensured that we were able to offer our passengers the opportunity to fly safely into the new millennium.”

January 1, 2000

http://www.flyertalk.com/forum/smile.gif to British Airways

RichG
Jan 1, 00, 10:32 am
Even if true, hard to believe anyone would get excited over this, since in-flight entertainment systems have something wrong with them about 40% of the time, anyway.

We've long since figured out that design and maintenance of entertainment systems has nothing to do with flight systems or we would never fly in the first place.




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