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What old technology that should have been replaced long ago do you still use regularly, and why?

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<pedantry>I think you mean deprecated (superseded or out of date), rather than obsolete (no longer used or useful). By definition, if you're using something it isn't obsolete. </pedantry> – Unsliced Apr 15 at 8:42
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I am really annoyed that this question has been closed! – Ola Eldøy Apr 16 at 0:05
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I am really annoyed that this question was asked...what purpose does it serve? – Jonathan Sampson Aug 26 at 14:13
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@Kelly French: Signal to noise ratio. To paraphrase the FAQ, "this is a site for programming questions that can be answered." In my opinion, this question does not match the criteria and would probably be more welcome at superuser.com . – Piskvor Aug 26 at 18:38
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131 Answers

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Buckle spring keyboard.

Yes, the machine gun keyboard from IBM. Bought a new one with USB connector and additional keys. Love it. Every single keystroke is a tiny pleasure.

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SMTP. Of course I don't have much choice if I want to send emails, do I? But come on, a standard that uses a goddamn 7-bit character set?

And it wouldn't be far-fetched to add IRC (the RFC doesn't even bother to specify an encoding!) or HTML to the list.

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Sybase's APT Workbench - a ncurses-like text based user interface to databases ;-)

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C89. I'm sure if I look for it, I'll find some awful K&R crawling horror lurking somewhere in this pile. Better not go there.

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I myself have always been using the newest technologies as far as I remember, but it was quite a shock when I started working in this "new" company:

Borland C++ 5/6, Visual C++ 6, and most likely some even older ones to follow. Also, applications have to support Windows 98/2000... and no plans to upgrade whatsoever.

Luckily I can use even older Vim to do the actual coding part.

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All of our report summaries and charts are produced using Excel VBA. The reason is because our reports were really crappy, and I wanted to make them better and I didn't know how to write code. So I just started googling VBA code and making reports. Now most of our reports for customers are coming from me.

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HyperCard and Macintosh System 6.

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Still using dBase III to support legacy code.

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I have an old ENIAC at home that I haven't had a chance to take to Goodwill. I still use it as a highly effective paperweight though.

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win32.hlp win32.hlp

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Microsoft SQL Server 2000, though we are slowly migrating to 2005...

Until early last year our Java source was running against JDK 1.3, but I got us up to 1.6.

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Still using Fortran 77, and not just running legacy code, but implementing new features. Recently, I integrated with some auto-generated code from MATLAB/Simulink. Many people in the scientific computing realms still use old, but fast languages.

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And they're really fast. Elegant solutions in more "modern" languages still can't keep up. I don't care for Fortran (anymore), but you have to give it it's due. Nothing does math faster. Nothing. – xcramps Aug 26 at 15:27
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Visual Basic 6.0 and PowerBuilder 10.

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Lotus Notes. :-(

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Comment on VBScript post above ... (new here, can't comment yet) and the general (ongoing) sorry state of scripting on Windows.

For my occasional scripting needs, I use VBScript, and it is absolutely obsolete. It can't natively communicate with newish .NET stuff without a COM layer - and we fled to .NET to avoid COM. However, like batch files and rain on Saturdays, it's always there. I also use a lot of batch files and, strangely, enjoy it much more than VBScript.

A batch file knows it's obsolete, and revels in it. Batch transcends obsolete to venerability.

PowerShell is theoretically a replacement. All the technical pieces are in place, it's fast and potent ... but few people can stand looking at it long enough to learn it. ("-gt", what were they thinking?).

JScript 8 could be a replacement, but someone forgot that scripting languages ought to be dynamic - Jscript 8 needs compilation as far as I can see.

I'm pushing my team / company to embrace IronPython and DLR in general. You can get your old COM, your newish WMI, your .NET, and get the immediate gratification that "scripting" should provide. I want to script IronPython, moving anything heavy off to C# libs. That's the dream ... the reality is that I know everyone can use JScript / VBScript / batch out of the box. Makes a guy want to switch to Unix.

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Visual FoxPro 9.0.

I'm disappointed it still exists. Foxpro 9.0 runs on Windows 7! It will never die like Visual Basic 6.0 is still alive.

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IBM OS/2 version 1.3

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Flatfile EDI.

eg:

UNB+UNOA:2+AAA+BBBB+080319:1152+111'

The Shipping Industry is still thinking about using XML. Thinking veeeeery slowly.

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The Lynx browser. Good for testing the text flow of web pages, and also good for testing site-usability for impaired people.

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Lynx is neither obsolete nor embarrassing. When in SysAdmin mode, I insist on having it on all machines, because sooner or later I'll be at a console with X and everything else broken and reading the device driver vendor's documentation... written in HTML. – kmarsh Jun 12 at 18:13
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Delphi 4. Our software still uses it, and it's too much work to retool it in anything else.

It makes you appreciate what you have nowadays. Probably the only thing worse would be older versions of Borland C++ builder, a horrible amalgamation of Delphi and C++.

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Tandem

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VBScript - I should be using PowerShell instead right?

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C#. It's like going back in time 15 years after using Lisp/SLIME.

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AppleWorks 6.0 on System 7, inside the Basilisk II Macintosh emulator on my Linux laptop.

Beats OpenOffice at speed, reliability, and pretty much everything else.

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QWERTY.

It should have been replaced long, long ago... the reason I still use it is obvious...

Funnily enough I'm typing this answer in Dvorak because I accidentally switched to Dvorak mode a few minutes ago.

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Why is DVORAK better than QWERTY? – eyze Aug 26 at 15:53
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@eyze because qwerty was made to slow you down and because, uh, there are lots of studies that WEREN'T headed by Dvorak that prove it! Wait, nevermind, that stuff is false. – TM Aug 26 at 17:09
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Just a random example: everytHinG cApitALizeD in tHiS Sentence iS on tHe Home row in qwerty. EvEryTHINg cApITAlIzED IN THIS SENTENcE IS ON THE HOmE rOw IN DvOrAk. Whether or not this translates to a real difference, I can't prove. But with Dvorak at least I know that actual research was behind the design... – Artelius Aug 28 at 10:46
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Java webapps still in Model 1 architecture.

For the uninformed, that means I have a lot of servlets with boatloads of "out.println" calls to generate the HTML.

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4GL...

We're in an ongoing never ending process to get it all into C#.

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HD-DVD player. can't afford a blu-ray now. but upscaling on regular dvd's works great. And I do have 10 HD-DVD titles.

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Microsoft Access 2000. Fortunately soon partly to be replaced by ASP.NET ;)

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Cobol

(thank you programmer from bank X)

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