How we coped with the new millennium Y2K bug computer scare.

There are chocolate-covered ants, so why not chocolate Y2K bugs?

From the San Jose Mercury News, June 24, 1999.

(Click the image to open it. Scroll down for the transcribed text)

Mike Cassidy article including photo of author and second photo showing Abrahams and Yacco behind computer keyboard covered by two Year 2K Bug candies.
Photo 1: Mike Cassidy Photo 2: Al Abraham’s left and Rich Yacco created chocolate bugs that are infested with investors.

Thursday, June 24, 1999 San Jose Mercury News
Silicon Valley Life
Mike Cassidy
Silicon Valley Dispatches

“There are chocolate covered ants so why not chocolate Y2K bugs?” We’ve all heard it. Silicon Valley streets lined with gold. A place where no opportunity goes untested. Land of milk and chocolate. Yes, milk and chocolate. You’ll see.

And then of course there’s the Y2K thing – or bug as some call it. And what does Y2K have to do with anything? Don’t you watch TV? It has to do with everything. Al Abrahams and Rich Yacco know this. They saw their chance and they’re grabbing it.

“Rich and I had been looking for a project to do,” says Abrahams, 56, a former candy store owner, insurance man, and local public television fundraiser. They found a 2 ounce chocolate bug – or bug shaped chocolate, as they prefer to call it. The edible Year 2k Bug ($4.99). And why not? Their first idea, the chocolate motherboard, wasn’t moving. Nearly a pound of chocolate in eight pieces shaped to look like computer guts. “The RAM chips in that motherboard are truffle filled,” Abrahams says. It was complicated and investors were not enthusiastic.

But Y2K bug? Oh yeah. Already all sorts are making millions on Y2K. There’s money and software solutions, canned food, bomb shelters, and candy. At least Abrahams and Yacco, a San Jose based freelance video producer, thinks so. “When we changed the concept to the Y2K bug,” says Abrahams of Santa Clara, “it was like, wow, we had investors in 30 days.”

That’s right, investors. This is Silicon Valley. You don’t just have ideas here. You start companies. “We needed something,” says Abrahams, CEO of the venture, “with squared in it.” And so they came up with Silicon Valley Confection Company or SVC2. No, they didn’t build a factory and hire a workforce. That’s not how it’s done here. They contracted with Knudsen’s Candy in Hayward to make their bug. “The biggest thrill of my business life,” Abrahams says, “was watching the first bugs coming off the assembly line.” Yes, people are buying them. They bought the pet rock, didn’t they? The bugs are selling at the San Jose and San Francisco airports and the Tech Museum of Innovation. A few candy stores have them and institutions seem to be fans. The U.S. Department of Energy put in an order to hand out on Y2K Awareness Day. Country clubs have ordered them as tournament prizes. Weber State University plans to hand them out to freshmen to herald the new millennium. Okay, the real new millennium begins 2001. Humor them.

It’s good that people are buying them now. You’ve got to figure Y2K interest will fade once the last New Year’s Champagne is popped, but Yacco, 47, remains cautiously pessimistic. “Some people have said that the Y2K problem won’t end until the middle of next year.” One can only hope. If you’re interested, for more on the bug see www.svc2.com. Have an Only in Silicon Valley story? Contact Mike Cassidy at mcassidy@sjmercury.com or call 408-920-5536.

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