Peter de Jager

Peter de Jager is best known for his Y2K early 1990s outcry warning,[1] and is the honoree of the eponymous de Jager Year 2000 index that began trading on the American Stock Exchange in 1997.[2][3]

De Jager co-authored "Countdown Y2K: Business Survival Planning for the Year 2000[4] and periodically writes for Canada's Municipal World magazine, focusing on Change Management.[5][6]

Y2K

From around 1980, as an IBM employee, he internally alerted them to the problem.[7]

In 1993[8] de Jager wrote a three page[9] item titled "Doomsday 2000"[10] about the effects of simple date calculations, and "testified before Congress in 1996."[11][9] His initial estimation of "the cost of fixing Y2K at between $50 billion and $70 billion"[12] was subsequently reported to have been too low:[13][10] Numbers like "only" $200 Billion[14] to over $300 Billion[15] proved more correct (for world-wide expenditures), with $120 Billion by USA firms.[3]

De Jager registered and built, www.year2000.com,[8] a website he later sold.

Part of his "we don't know in advance what will fail, ... so we have to fix everything" message was quoted by The New York Times in the summer of 1998, which listed examples of cascading effects on "smoke alarms, lighting systems and even thermostats in individual apartments." Fears of elevators that would go up and not come down were reported.

Although de Jager was quoted as not owning "a single share of any year-2000 stock" and that he "never mentioned a vendor from the stage"[16] his year2000.com website had "a list of Y2K consultants and experts;"[8] Forbes magazine wrote that he "makes money selling advertising on his Y2K web site."[3]

Consulting

His "eponymous consulting firm" is based in Vancouver.[10]

Personal

He was born in South Africa.

The wife of the 1955-born de Jager is named Antoinette, and they have two sons.[16]

References

  1. NYTimes: "the information-age equivalent of the midnight ride of Paul Revere"
  2. Beth Piskora (March 1, 1997). "The Dow decimal system". The New York Post. p. 26.
  3. Michael Noer (March 12, 1998). "Y2K fear merchants". Forbes.
  4. Peter de Jager; Richard Bergeon (1998). Countdown Y2K: Business Survival Planning for the Year 2000. ISBN 978-0471-32734-9.
  5. https://www.municipalworld.com/feature-story/shifting-into-leadership-mode
  6. https://www.municipalworld.com/articles/somebody-will-fix-it-by-then
  7. unsourced in French wikipedia article
  8. Jay Romano (August 16, 1998). "Dealing With the Y2K Bug". The New York Times. Retrieved February 26, 2020.
  9. Eric Andrew-Gee (December 28, 2019). "Y2K: The strange, true history of how Canada prepared for an apocalypse that never happened, but changed us all". The Globe and Mail.
  10. Cory Johnson (December 29, 1999). "Y2K Crier's Crisis". TheStreet.
  11. and the Canadian parliament
  12. Dominique Deckmyn (January 1, 2000). "Have we learned nothing from Y2K?". Computerworld. wrote one of the first warnings about Y2K in Computerworld (Sept. 6, 1993)
  13. and Gartner Group's "could cost $300 to $600 billion" too high on the upper number.
  14. report about testimony before the United States Senate's Y2K committee: "Leap Day Had Its Glitches". Wired (magazine). March 2000.
  15. "Y2K: Overhyped and oversold?".
  16. Barnaby J. Feder (October 11, 1998). "The Town Crier for the Year 2000". The New York Times.
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