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Ten Technologies That Refuse to Die

kudyadi writes "Technology Review has an interesting article on, as the title suggests, ten technologies that we continue using despite advances made in the same. The best example is that of analog watches, "Compared to today's digital timepieces, old-fashioned, sweep-hand watches are pathetic one-trick ponies. Digital-watch wearers can check temperature, altitude, and the time in Tokyo, play tunes and games, and send messages. Can wristwatch videoconferencing, Web surfing, and tarot readings be far off? But what digital watches can't do, according to sweep-hand proponents, is display the time and context as elegantly and intuitively as an analog model."" Interesting counterpoint to this post from a few years back about technologies that didn't manage to hang on. And Bruce Sterling has a short list of ones he'd like to see go away, too ;)

10 of 1,381 comments (clear)

  1. Small benefits by SimplyCosmic · · Score: 3, Informative

    Two things I like about analog timepieces:

    The first is that you can usually make out the time further away, and in poorer lighting conditions, from an analog clock versus a digital.

    The second is that you can use your analog watch as an impromptu compass. In the northern hemisphere, hold the watch flat and point the hour hand towards the sun. Now bisect the angle between the hour hand and the figure 12 (ie. noon) on your watch to give you a North-South line. In the southern hemisphere, hold the watch dial and point the figure 12 (ie. noon) towards the sun. The line that bisects the angle between the hour hand and the figure 12 is the North-South line.

  2. Re:Old-fashioned watches by Country_hacker · · Score: 5, Informative

    Point the hour hand in the direction of the sun (Keeping it horizontal of course), and the point between the hour hand and 12 will be South. For you "Below the belt" /.rs (South of the equator ;-) it'll be pointing North.

    Cheers!
    --RjS

    --
    Never give any object more potential energy than you want it to have.
  3. Re:Windows NT by Reverend528 · · Score: 3, Informative

    A lot of public schools are still using 95.

  4. Re:Some are, some aren't by Savatte · · Score: 3, Informative

    I use a typewriter almost everyday at work. Typing purchase orders requires a typewriter, since ours are carbon paper based.

    And I find that feeding an envelope or a label into the typewriter is much easier than setting up the printer to print one address. It may not be elegant, but it's simple

    Of course, I can't surf slashdot from a typewriter.

  5. Re:Bruce Sterling link by erasmus_ · · Score: 4, Informative

    Annoying, wasn't it? Here is the link to the full article that I saw in that Google search though.

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  6. Bruce Sterling's article by Rufus211 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Here's a real link to the article instead of having to look through Google:
    Ten technologies that deserve to die

  7. Re:"Sweep Hand" Watches Rule by selderrr · · Score: 3, Informative

    if you like a clock that's quick to read, AND you're a MacOSX user, may i recommend fuzzyclock ?

  8. Re:vacuum tubes?! by iggymanz · · Score: 3, Informative

    Of course, vacuum tubes are alive & well in every radio & television station, and every microwave oven across america. There are solid state devices that will do a similar job, but they are horribly expensive & not as robust.

  9. Apple using Wintel technology by solprovider · · Score: 3, Informative

    Modern Mac has the old ROM stored on disk, Openfirmware, OS X, (S)ATA, CD/DVD-RW, USB, Firewire, PCI, AGP, RJ-45, Ethernet, DVI, PowerPC... note that the Mac has grown more in the direction of the PC than vice versa

    I do not know Macs, so I may have missed something, but which of these started with the Wintel PC?

    ROM/Open firmware - The news is that Wintels may do this soon, but I have yet to see motherboard without ROM BIOS.

    OS X - Unix, not Wintel

    SATA - From the harddrive manufacturers. The implementation for Wintel has the BIOS must faking one of the standard IDE positions so that MSWindows thinks it is running from "C:". This reduces the number of drives that can be used in a dual IDE/SATA PC, and encourages the consumer to find an OS that can fully use the hardware. This could not have been planned by MS.

    CD/DVD-RW - Consumer technology coopted by the computer world.

    USB - The Wintel answer to Firewire.

    Firewire - Apple. It is so much an Apple technology that Intel refuses to incorporate it into their motherboards.

    PCI, AGP - Hardware manufacturers, but they are the standards for Wintel. Be thankful that Apple has decided to follow the "standards" for commodity hardware.

    RJ-45, Ethernet - Ethernet came from the mainframe/Unix world. It barely touched the Wintel world until the late 80s. The RJ45 plug was a quick prototype that accidentally made it into production. The engineers are still kicking themselves for designing a plug that is designed to catch on EVERYTHING.

    DVI - I do not know who started this.

    PowerPC - IBM. Was it first designed for Apple or Microsoft? Does anybody other than Apple and IBM use it?

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  10. Musical Instruments by fornix · · Score: 4, Informative

    Despite all the advances in in technology and manufacturing, old musical gear still reigns supreme in many areas. A vintage Neumann U47 mic (like the Beatles used) fetches a tidy sum and sounds better than most anything made these days. They don't make the exact replacement vacuum tube for it anymore, but there are close substitutes.

    And speaking of tubes - the rich nonlinear sound of a tube amplifier hasn't yet been replaced by a more modern equivalent, especially for electric guitar. I think one of the articles mentioned vacuum tubes.

    Piano, horns, guitar - most all acoustic instruments have nice sounding synthesized sampled versions that can be had at a fraction of the cost. These can be played from your computer or a keyboard. Yet the physical instruments, as expensive and potentially out of tune as they are, will probably always be preferred because of their human interface. Similarly, drum machines, which do not show up late or steal your girlfriend, are not replacing human drummers playing acoustic drums, except in 80's music and certain "techo" genres.