| Simulated Real Time Clock Presents the Century Byte Representing 19 Instead of 20 in the 21st CenturyID: Q193376 
 | 
The simulated Real Time Clock (RTC) will always present the century byte representing 19 instead of 20 in the 21st Century. This causes MS-DOS-based programs that access the Real Time Clock to receive the wrong date. For example, the year 2000 is interpreted as the year 1900.
A supported fix that corrects this problem is now available from Microsoft,
but has not been fully regression tested and should be applied only to
systems experiencing this specific problem.
To resolve this problem immediately, download the fix as described below.
For a complete list of Microsoft Product Support Services phone numbers and
information on support costs, please go to the following address on the
World Wide Web:
http://support.microsoft.com/support/supportnet/default.aspThe English version of this fix should have the following file attributes or later:
   Date      Time                 Size    File Name     Platform
   -------------------------------------------------------------
   09/25/98  03:44p               406,352 Ntvdm.exe     (x86)
   09/25/98  03:45p             1,700,624 Ntvdm.exe     (Alpha) ftp://ftp.microsoft.com/bussys/winnt/winnt-public/fixes/usa/NT351/hotfixes-postSP5/y2k-fix/
Q154871 Determining If Your Product Is Eligible for No-Charge Technical Support
Microsoft has confirmed this to be a problem in Windows NT version 3.51.
Keywords          : kb2000 kbbug3.51 kbfix3.51 
Version           : WinNT:3.51
Platform          : winnt 
Issue type        : kbbug Last Reviewed: February 19, 1999