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Ask Slashdot: What Tech Products Were Built To Last?

itwbennett writes: "When you think about tech products these days, you probably think 'refresh cycle' more than 'built to last.' But there are plenty of tech products that put up with hard, daily use year after year. Here's a few to get you started: Logitech MX510 mouse, Brother black & white laser printer, Casio G-Shock watch, Alvin Draf-Tec Retrac mechanical pencil, Sony Dream Machine alarm clock. What's your longest-lasting, hardest-working device?"

702 comments

  1. Commodore Amiga 3000T by LWATCDR · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Still works as does my IBM PS2 Model 95. There are still DEC PDP-11s in daily use as well.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    1. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by Joce640k · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Fluke multimeters...

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

      --
      No sig today...
    2. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by brokenin2 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I used to work there (on that line for a while), and one of the jobs was to beat them up a bit before they went out the door, just to make sure they could take it.. (We were careful not to scuff them up, but did need to subject them to a couple of impacts in each direction as part of the final testing).

      Note, when he took it apart in the video, he very likely *did* make it go out of spec at that point.. It's normally just the high voltage that goes out of spec, but would normally only mean that you got a reading of 1007 VAC instead of 1000 VAC.. Still somewhat close..

      He should send it back for recalibration after his adventure..

    3. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      My Radio Shack Micronta 22-203A 30,000 ohm/volt analog multimeter I received at age 12. It ss still working fine and is accurate. If component ever has problem it has schematic and troubleshooting instructions. I'm over half a century old.

    4. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by lgw · · Score: 1
      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    5. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by innocent_white_lamb · · Score: 1

      I bought one of those with my allowance when I was about the same age. It's currently occupying space on a shelf about six feet away from where I'm sitting now. It works as well today as it did when I first bought it.

      --
      If you're a zombie and you know it, bite your friend!
    6. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by hurfy · · Score: 1

      Hmm, have to check what brand my alarm clock radio is but pretty sure it isn't Sony. I'll nominate it anyway I suppose as it has been at it for 30? years. Nice large red LED display and 2 alarms. The paint is worn off near the alarm buttons but both still work.

    7. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by ericloewe · · Score: 1

      They don't really need to design them to last that long, considering they typically refuse to honor their warranties anyway.

      Then they wonder why their laptops don't sell...

    8. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      Have they attached the inductor any better since his video? Enquiring minds...

      He did eventually fix it up and it still works. It appears in some later videos, eg. this one: https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

      PS: I scored one of those on eBay after I watched that. Cost me $80 but still a pretty good buy. It still has the "US Army" sticker on it complete with last calibration date (Feb 2011). There's not a mark on either the meter or the carrying case and the probes were brand new in plastic bag. I reckon it never left stores... "beauty!"

      --
      No sig today...
    9. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by jspey · · Score: 1

      I may use the same alarm clock. My wife had it when we married, I think as a hand-me-down from her parents.

      --
      Cover your butt. Bernard is watching.
    10. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by beltsbear · · Score: 1

      The Sony timer in my car diskman worked pretty well, product died after 1.5 years. That was my last expensive Sony product.

    11. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by operagost · · Score: 1

      My Realistic (Radio Shack) clock radio, with battery backup, vinyl "wood" and aluminum trim, has been working for 30 years. I carried it with me back and forth to college and through multiple moves. It works perfectly and only has a small crack on the plastic covering the radio dial to show for it.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    12. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by matfud · · Score: 1

      Nokia phones, even feature phones (not so much the smart phones). They are almost indestructable.
      A 3310. Plug it in and it will work even if you have for some reason thrown it out of a plane or decided that it would like to see the bottom of the mariana trench. Dry it out and it will probably work.

      Almost bullet proof (OK they are made of plastic so not really proofed against bullets). Not just that they put up with people mistreating them. You actually had to really try to damage them. Not accidental.

    13. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by WaywardGeek · · Score: 2, Informative

      My HP-41CV calculator from 1981. My wife still uses her HP-12C. My HP calculator's cutting edge usefulness vastly outlasted any computer. It's finally been replaced by a calculator app on my Android phone that emulates it!

      --
      Celebrate failure, and then learn from it - Nolan Bushnell
    14. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Married my wife around the time the PS2 came out. Still cleans up after me and gives me sex, so she's my "longest-lasting, hardest-working device".

    15. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by stox · · Score: 2

      My HP-97 from 1978 is still working fine. Time for some new rubber on the card loader, though.

      --
      "To those who are overly cautious, everything is impossible. "
    16. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Every multimeter I've ever owned still worked when I got rid of it. Unless you overamp them or something, they will live a long time. I don't consider Flukes anything special.

    17. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by rworne · · Score: 1

      Odd Sony is mentioned. We have a Vaio sub-notebook built in 1999 that still runs like a champ. The battery is shot and there's no replacements to be found, but it does the job as long as you are willing to put up with Windows 2000 (it shipped with Windows 98SE). We have two Sony alarm clocks going on 10 years that are still going strong.

      My 1st gen PS3 dies every year like clockwork, with Sony happy to fix/replace it for a fee.

      --
      I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
    18. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by CreatureComfort · · Score: 1

      I'll ditto that.

      I bought my 41CX in 87 or 88, and it's still a toss up whether I grab it or my android phone (RealCalc app by Quartic Software) to do calculations on a daily basis.

      Usually the HP wins, because it always has battery power.

      --
      "Unheard of means only it's undreamed of yet,
      Impossible means not yet done." ~~ Julia Ecklar
    19. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by WaywardGeek · · Score: 1

      Oh! You totally beat me to mentioning RealCalc. The HP-41CV is a better calculator, even if RealCalc is awesome, but like my camera, it doesn't fit nicely in my pocket.

      --
      Celebrate failure, and then learn from it - Nolan Bushnell
    20. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by WaywardGeek · · Score: 1

      I solved my cellphone battery life problem with a Moto-X from Republic Wireless. Republic still has a few growing pains to get past, but for big geeks who don't mind putting their phone in airplane mode and enabling wifi once or twice a day, it's amazing. In that mode, I go for days without having to charge it, though my phone is only a few feet from the wireless router most of the time. For $25/month for "unlimited" Sprint 3G everything but tethering, it's hard to beat.

      --
      Celebrate failure, and then learn from it - Nolan Bushnell
    21. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by NewtonsLaw · · Score: 1

      And my Cassio FX-115, going strong since the very early 1980s and it has *never* needed a replacement battery (perhaps because it's totally solar powered).

    22. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Beware, that kind of dishwasher often develops leaks and a bad temperament around 40-50 years after its original delivery date.

    23. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by Smauler · · Score: 1

      Some things don't get a lot of wear. You touch them at most a few times a day.

      Amusingly, my Logitech MX510 did die. The left click button failed (after about 5 years). However, I loved that mouse, and therefore bought another Logitech (a g9x, which I am still using). It was expensive, but I had no reservations about buying it because of the reviews and the performance of the previous mouse.

      You see, when my MX510 died, I bought another Logitech product. It had served me well, and perhaps I could have got a replacement after it failed. My use was not typical, probably, but that shouldn't matter. Now an owner of a g9x, and when that dies.... I'll buy another Logitech mouse, because they have served me well.

    24. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by sneakyimp · · Score: 1

      My Microsoft Intellimouse is about 15 years old. I've got some Sennheiser HD 280 headphones that are LOUD AS HELL and still going strong after about 20 years. And I've got a Fender Twin '65 reissue tube amp that's twenty years old and still sounds incredible. I also love my cast iron skillets. They are probably 30 years old. I expect they will last quite some time.

    25. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by pcutt · · Score: 1

      I've had some pretty crappy ones and the common theme is that they were budget units. My Keithley, which I got in 82 lasted 20 years, which got replaced by a Fluke that is giving me lots of great service.

    26. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by tsa · · Score: 1

      Same here. Mine is a cheap Chinese one I bought 30 years ago and is still working fine.

      --

      -- Cheers!

    27. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by msim · · Score: 1

      I lost a lot of my early gear when I moved interstate 15 years ago, I had some gear that was almost as old as I am, but unfortunately I had to find another home for them. I regret a few of them going out of my reach.

      As to laptops and other computers. I was thinking other tech that just keeps on ticking, clocks, etc but i can sort of play this game..
      Some of the gear I have kept since my move are as follows:

      * A Dell CPx Pentium 233 laptop that I keep in storage, it's handy to have something with a real serial port and it gets dragged out whenever I need a terminal.
      * A Sony C1 series Picturebooks. I had wanted one of these for YEARS since i saw them new in the shop and I ended up getting one (a PCG-C1XS) for a fraction of the original price.
      * The same can be said about the Toshiba Libretto, I liked those and picked up a Libretto 50 a couple of years ago. Again at a fraction of the original retail cost.

      I have some slightly obscure hardware floating about that I've kept "just because". My oldest two are a Sparcstation 5 which is sitting in the garage in storage with the Dell Cpx and a Sparcstation 20 that still works, but as it's old and rather noisy it has been retired from service and now serves as a stand to keep my desptop pc & NAS from sitting directly on the carpet next to my desk. I used to have a Sparcstation2, but I gave it away when I decided to cut down on the crap a bit.
      Some not-as-old but equally obscure gear is my IBM PC 365, my Dec Alphastation 500/500 as well as a Sun Ultra 5...

      --

      Life is like a box of chocolates, you never know when your gonna get food poisoning.
    28. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by davester666 · · Score: 1

      Microsoft Intellimouse Optical mouse.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    29. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I actually threw a 3330 as hard as I could into a brick wall from about a metre away once.

      Damn thing still worked afterwards. Of course all the trims and the battery flew off/out, but once all those bits were put back, it was like it never happened.

      Nokia featurephones are truly indestructible in terms of physical damage. I disagree with the "mariana trench" bit though. I was once sleeping in a tent at a music festival - rain leaked into the tent overnight, and I woke up to discover my 3210 in a pool of water, displaying "CONTACT SERVICE" in an odd font on its screen. It would never again do anything beyond that, no matter what I tried to dry it out.

    30. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by Archimonde · · Score: 1

      If only they made some really pocketable multimeters for us IT/Systems guys.

      I don't need a 2KG brick to check if a power supply is dead or not.

      --
      Trolls are like broken clocks. They show the truth two times a day. The rest of the day they talk nonsense.
    31. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by gtall · · Score: 1

      My HP-45 from 1974 still works fine.

    32. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My Sony Dream Machine alarm clock is utter crap. The sound quaility is abysmal, tinny, no bass at all which makes tiring to listen to. The clock doesn't keep time (gains about a minute a month). The display has gotten progressively dimmer since I bought it 18 months ago and now can only be seen in very dim light or darkness. How the hell can anyone say this abortion of product engineering was 'built to last'? My previous Phillips radio alarm clock gave sterling service for over 25 years. This Sony peice of shit is going in the bin soon.

    33. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by swamp+boy · · Score: 1

      Yes, the IBM Model 95 was really cool. I remember the first time I saw one up close, I just kept staring at it in awe.

    34. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by toddestan · · Score: 1

      I've got one of the slightly newer Sony "Dream Machines" that uses the backlit LCD. I use it for a clock in the office, as the radio part barely works anymore. The daylight savings time button on it, however, is pretty innovative and I've always wondered why no one else has copied it. Push it in the spring to advance the clock by and hour, and push it again in the fall to set it back an hour. Simple and elegant.

      My alarm clock in the bedroom is a GE clock radio from sometime in the early 90's with the red LED display, fake woodgrain, and 9V backup. Still going strong.

    35. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by warpuck · · Score: 0

      Convus 415 calculator, 1974. Toyota FJ60, micronta 22-10 multimeter and '95 Ford Ranger/Mazda 4 cylinder, 5 speed sold it still running at 290,000 miles. Probably why Ford quit selling them in N. America. Movado museum watch.

    36. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by steeleyeball · · Score: 1

      My Commodore Vic 20 still works fine thanks...

    37. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by Agripa · · Score: 1

      I would say Tektronix oscilloscopes from before Danaher bought them but the oldest test instruments I have that I regularly use are ESI 250DA impedance bridges.

    38. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by OffTheWallSoccer · · Score: 1

      My Micronta alarm clock has worked great for 30 years.

      Meanwhile, my kids are on their third set of alarm clocks, due to various failures (in the clocks!). Looks like they don't design clocks to last, any more.

    39. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you have a Sisco router and a Sonny television, you imbecile?

    40. Re:Commodore Amiga 3000T by matfud · · Score: 1

      It is working then as it is proudly saying that it is not working. Try wiggling the SIM or a different SIM.

      I never got any of mine to say that. They just did not break (apart from the plastic covers flying off (clip them back on or buy a new bling set for pennies)

      You may actually have broken one. I am humbled Sir as that is quite an impressive feat.

  2. My toilet by kruach+aum · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's gotten nothing but shit every day for 30 years and it still works just as well as when I first got it.

    1. Re:My toilet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Let me guess, you piss in the sink?

    2. Re:My toilet by omnichad · · Score: 4, Funny

      Works better when you hook it up to your home water supply.

    3. Re:My toilet by rolfwind · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Toilets really are one of the best tech inventions of all time. And I do mean tech in every sense of the word. Porcelain is the best material for it, and while the chinese had it for a long time, when the west (Kingdom of Saxony) got it/discovered it, it gaurded the secret closely. Thankfully it got out, are it would be relegated to fancy sculptures and plates.

      This isn't to mention all the requirements like running water and sewer system... but a lot of tech resembles Maslow's hierarchy of needs, as in the oldest stuff is generally the most essential, and as time goes on, the newer stuff is icing on the cake.

    4. Re:My toilet by Jmc23 · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, the western design isn't actually conducive to elimination and may have created more problems than it solved.

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
    5. Re:My toilet by drainbramage · · Score: 1

      Sure you're not confusing saddles with toilets?
      I can see how that can happen.

      --
      No brain, no pain.
    6. Re:My toilet by justthinkit · · Score: 1

      True. And true of many western things. Does chipboard really make a more cost-effective house? I think I prefer Islamic banking to Western as well.

      --
      I come here for the love
    7. Re:My toilet by Jmc23 · · Score: 1
      Of course you can!

      You're brain damaged and don't know anything about anatomy.

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
    8. Re:My toilet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to joke, but for the price you can get them for, I'm astounded that the things never crack or fail in some catastrophic way.

    9. Re:My toilet by matfud · · Score: 1

      Nah. All that was required was a strong structure and a very good glazed finish. Pottery gives the first and advances in glazing give the second. Neither required the far east. That was more directly related to fine china and in the west how to copy it (bone china). Bogs are and have been mostly cast clay with a glass like glaze.

    10. Re:My toilet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Never heard of shitting dick nipples? I'd link ya, but, I ain't gonna try searching for that at work.

    11. Re:My toilet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Toilets really are one of the best tech inventions of all time

      Disagree. The toilet is a terrible technology that we are, unfortunately, pretty locked in to.

      Think about it: urine and feces are both rich in nutrients. Urine is generally sterile, and can be applied directly to crops. Feces is more dangerous in terms of pathogens, but only needs to be properly composted before it too can serve as a valuable fertilizer. Instead of separating and collecting these two great resources, we mix them together in a bowl of clean water. (Oh, by the way, we have also built an huge infrastructure for purifying this water to where it is safe to drink, and distributing it to every building in town.) Every time we use the toilet, we expend several litres of this crystal clear drinking water to wash these valuable nutrients down the drain, where it is then mixed with spent washing water, industrial waste, and (in many older sewage systems) runoff from the streets. This whole mess then goes through another huge, energy-intensive infrastructure to remove all the nasty stuff we put in it - at least, as much of it as we can remove. Otherwise all that pathogenic, un-composted feces would go into our rivers, where it would cause algal blooms, kill fish, and spread disease to anyone who were to drink from it. All the crap (literally) that we flushed away still often ends up getting spread on fields -- the nutrients are too valuable to waste, after all -- only now they are contaminated with all the other toxic stuff we also sent down the drain.

      So not a great technology, even if they are built to last.

    12. Re:My toilet by Known+Nutter · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, the western design isn't actually conducive to elimination and may have created more problems than it solved.

      This is true... and the poor design is relatively easy to overcome...

      http://www.squattypotty.com/

      --
      Beware of the Leopard.
    13. Re:My toilet by matfud · · Score: 1

      Not ideal, but better than chucking it out on the street.

      Sewers where a great advancement. Not to say that it could not of been done better. Combined sewers and street run off do cause problems. Industrial waste is now regulated and not in those same systems (mostley)
       

    14. Re:My toilet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Guess you've been reading too much Ann Wigmore or Viktoras Kulvinskas...while I admire these people for their work, in the realm of elimination the modern western toilet is far better than the alternatives. Besides if you wanna eliminate properly, just get a foot-stool FFS.

      captcha: dignity! haha

    15. Re:My toilet by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      I thought you were supposed to piss in the tank and use that to wash away what's the bowl... no?

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    16. Re:My toilet by pr0fessor · · Score: 2

      I picked up a magnavox am/fm radio turntable cabinet model at a yard sale in the 80s the couple told me they had got it for their son as a gift when he started college in 1962 but he didn't have room for it so it sat in their attic. It was open but still had the original packaging I used it for about 10 years then gave it to a friend who still uses it {the fm radio anyway it has a really great sound}.

      It's actually older than my toilet.

    17. Re:My toilet by retroworks · · Score: 1

      The "Great Stink of London" might offer a counterpoint. http://retroworks.blogspot.com...

      --
      Gently reply
    18. Re:My toilet by ndrw · · Score: 1

      I think you're wrong on the balance of good/harm. Do you know how many people died of cholera? Typhoid? Simple diarrhea? How often have you had ameobocentosis?

    19. Re:My toilet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you provide some info on this? You have my attention.

    20. Re:My toilet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it did not get out - it was stolen. The perpetrators would have been hanged today.

    21. Re:My toilet by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      I just wish we had continued to develop it like the Japanese have. I can't understand why in the west we don't import that technology. Heated seats, built-in bidet, sound effects to cover up embarrassing noises, in-bowl lighting for when you need to pee at night without waking yourself up too much...

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    22. Re:My toilet by greg1104 · · Score: 1

      My Dynaco ST-70 tube amp from the early 60's is older than any of the toilets I use regularly.

    23. Re:My toilet by pr0fessor · · Score: 1

      I used to have a re-issued crate tube 2X12 combo with spring reverb, a celestion 12' classic and green back mismatched. I loved the tone but it was so heavy and difficult to move around. I have a crate 90 watt tube half stack with a 4X12 cab now that has great tone. I've never figured out why the watt rating on a solid state amp never really compares to a tube in dB output. I always find it funny the Marshal valvestate is very popular but when I'm jamming with someone that has one, 100 watts solid state just doesn't stack up against my 90 watt tube.

       

  3. Atari 800 by JoeWalsh · · Score: 2

    My Atari 800 home computer is my longest-lasting, hardest-working electronics device. It was built like a tank (the metal shielding alone weighs several pounds).

    Other than that, I suppose my alarm clock. I've had it since 1988 and it just keeps going. Nothing fancy - LED display, just a clock with alarm, no radio functionality or anything like that.

    1. Re:Atari 800 by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      "Hardest working"?

      --
      No sig today...
    2. Re:Atari 800 by Altus · · Score: 4, Funny

      Its not easy to get JoeWalsh out of bed in the morning. I assume it is because he goes to parties.... sometimes until 4.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    3. Re:Atari 800 by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 5, Funny

      "my scsi-3 bus is fast and its wide,
      I lost my R-term and now it won't drive."

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    4. Re:Atari 800 by Concerned+Onlooker · · Score: 5, Funny

      I have a firewall
      So I won't get jacked
      My password's weak
      So I still got hacked

      --
      http://www.rootstrikers.org/
    5. Re:Atari 800 by RJFerret · · Score: 1

      Sadly my digital alarm clock from that era just a few months ago started running fast. It was free with the digital watch I purchased back then (or vice-versa, the watch was $9 and the alarm clock was free, I don't remember which).

      Longest lasting have been calculators, home stereo, and Amiga computers; but nothing is as long lasting and hard working as automotive electronics and sensors, ranging from sub-zero temperatures to hundreds of degrees (Fahrenheit), and lasting decades.

      I'm surprised a Logitech mouse was listed, as any I've had, the buttons died within months.

    6. Re:Atari 800 by sconeu · · Score: 4, Funny

      So got me an office
      With a fat cat-6 pipe
      Send me an email
      Maybe I'll skype.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    7. Re:Atari 800 by xdor · · Score: 1

      I really find this hard to believe. I had an Atari 800XL: sure the metal shielding had some weight, but several pounds?

      And once we moved to a warmer climate those they didn't last at all. Must have gone through four of 'em

    8. Re:Atari 800 by Shinobi · · Score: 1

      "I'm surprised a Logitech mouse was listed, as any I've had, the buttons died within months."

      Wtf do you do with yours? Use a pneumatic hammer when you need to click?

    9. Re:Atari 800 by crow · · Score: 1

      My Atari 800 died a few years back. Something died in the power system. I thought it was a bad power supply (all the peripherals used the same supplies), so I swapped some around. It turns out it blew some internal fuse in each supply that I attached to it. I ended up buying a replacement on eBay, but I've since given up on it (too many other things taking up my time for the old games). I'll use an emulator the next time I want to use it.

    10. Re:Atari 800 by cusco · · Score: 1

      We bought our Sony stereo in 1992, when we first bought our house. Almost all the writing is worn off the remote control but we know what buttons are which by now. It has the last functioning cassette tape player in the house.

      My oldest piece of tech gear though is the microscope my folks bought me second hand in 1974. They got it from a retiring college professor and it was at least 20 or so years old then. Can't remember the brand unfortunately, but I can see the label on its wooden box in my head, Lux-something.

      --
      "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
    11. Re:Atari 800 by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      nice one!

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
    12. Re:Atari 800 by RabidReindeer · · Score: 1

      "I'm surprised a Logitech mouse was listed, as any I've had, the buttons died within months."

      Wtf do you do with yours? Use a pneumatic hammer when you need to click?

      My mice (Microsoft AND Logitech) get "Parkinson's Disease". After a while, they won't stay put on point. Not even the optical ones.

    13. Re:Atari 800 by khellendros1984 · · Score: 1

      Something similar happened in my Super Nintendo. It blew an internal fuse. I replaced it with a fuse taken from an even less-functional system, and the same thing happened. I just bridged the gap with wire. Some resolutions work perfectly, but higher-res output won't display anything. My guess is that there are multiple bad capacitors on the board.

      --
      It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
    14. Re:Atari 800 by CityZen · · Score: 2

      The 800XL was built very differently from the original 800. (The XL was very much cost-reduced.)
      For a look inside the 800, see: http://www.the-liberator.net/s...
      For the 800XL, see: http://www.1000bit.it/lista/a/... (from sequence http://www.1000bit.it/scheda.a... )

    15. Re:Atari 800 by Golden_Rider · · Score: 1

      I really find this hard to believe. I had an Atari 800XL: sure the metal shielding had some weight, but several pounds?

      And once we moved to a warmer climate those they didn't last at all. Must have gone through four of 'em

      Atari 800 http://oldcomputers.net/pics/a...

      =/=

      Atari 800XL http://oldcomputers.net/pics/a...

    16. Re:Atari 800 by Spock2001 · · Score: 1

      Beat me to it! I just played a bunch of games loaded off my XF 551 floppy drive (sat for about 10 years in the basement until I powered it up today - you'd never guess it was 25+ years old).

    17. Re:Atari 800 by wagnerrp · · Score: 1

      The only problems I've ever had with with Logitech mice is the scroll wheels give out, and they can't make recharging contacts worth a shit on any of their devices.

    18. Re:Atari 800 by tsa · · Score: 1

      You must be very hard on your mice.
      I have a Logitech trackball that has served me well for almost twenty years now. I hope it will never break because they're not on sale anymore. They have been for a very long time though.

      --

      -- Cheers!

    19. Re:Atari 800 by tsa · · Score: 1

      Has been serving me well.

      --

      -- Cheers!

    20. Re:Atari 800 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Second the 800. It boots via SIO cable plugged into a serial port of a laptop now, but still going strong. Also honorable mention to Wico joysticks, minus the cable portion.

    21. Re:Atari 800 by Shirley+Marquez · · Score: 1

      In the olden daisies some of us did use them for productivity applications. There was a decent for its day word processor, Paper Clip, and a good spreadsheet, SynCalc. Both have been greatly surpassed by now and they only supported dot matrix printers, so they don't see much use any more; anybody still using an Atari is either playing games, writing retrogames, or creating chiptunes.

    22. Re:Atari 800 by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Probably playing Diablo. I wore a few mouse buttons out that way too.

    23. Re:Atari 800 by Mad-Bassist · · Score: 1

      The 800XL and other post-Tramiel models were very different from the classic 800. It was a tank, but the keyboard eventually died on mine. Unfortunately, those were hard to replace then and probably near-impossible to find now. At least with all the mods I did on mine (GTIA graphics chip, Omnimon, a keyboard speaker-silencing switch, and green power LEDs) I was very good at disassembly/reassembly. The shielding in there is pretty extensive, and the plastic was pretty thick too.

      --
      "The only legitimate use of a computer is to play games." - Eugene Jarvis
  4. MacBook Air 13 Inch by MuChild · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I have had my MacBook Air running almost continuously for three years. Almost no hiccups. That's about it!

    1. Re:MacBook Air 13 Inch by rochrist · · Score: 3, Informative

      I've got a Power Mac G4 from 2002 that's been running my professional recording studio for 12 years now without a hiccup.

    2. Re:MacBook Air 13 Inch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2008 (March) Macbook Pro. Working like a champ. My TiVo, Oct 2006.

    3. Re:MacBook Air 13 Inch by tipo159 · · Score: 1

      I had a 12" Powerbook G4 that I sold a couple of years ago. It was just too slow to running the applications that I needed to run.

      I still have a Powerbook 540c (from 1995) that I play SimTower on. I also use it as a serial console for my collection of Sun lunchbox systems and Axil 320 SPARCstation 20 clone. They still all still run (despite PROM battery failures), but I don't use them frequently.

    4. Re:MacBook Air 13 Inch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a no brand name desktop pc from 2001, the graphics card melted by year four since it was a high end saphire radeon that got REALLY hot but the rest is working since day one, the amazing part is the hard disk, an old 80 gig maxtor that still works. Check this out: It has downloaded everything i have downloaded since 2001 up until last year when i started downloading stuff in this pc, but only stuff smaller than 2 gb or so, for everything bigger i still use it, especially for overnight use, It has had a fan on it since day one and its properly cooled

      on the other hand i never had a logitech mouse that lasted more than a year, and i had several. My hands sweat more than usual and logitech circuits are not properlly insulated so i melt them, i even melt the paint on them, nowadays i never buy any logitech mouse, they are too expensive for only 1 year use
      I also had a plextor cd burner that lasted less than a year, pretty pathetic considering their brand fame, did not do anything weird with it, the same i have done with every other burner, while it worked it was amazing but one day it just died

      The last 2 graphic cards have been a dissapointment, 2 mid level gigabytes, they died on me in 2 years exactly, just a couple of months after warranty was gone. I had no intentions to changing them at that time because i had made my research and they were supossed to last me 3 years of gaming at least. Not cool

      have never ever had a hard disk fail on me, ever

    5. Re:MacBook Air 13 Inch by Sloppy · · Score: 5, Funny

      A computer that has run for three years. That's so cute!

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    6. Re:MacBook Air 13 Inch by cusco · · Score: 1

      A former customer has a Win98 desktop machine that runs their security system. Thing hasn't been turned off since a power outage in 2005 (UPS hiccuped), and hadn't been restarted in the previous five years. There's no way to get the data off the machine except to take the 250 mb hard drive out and stick it in some other ancient machine that has an IDE controller.

      --
      "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
    7. Re:MacBook Air 13 Inch by khellendros1984 · · Score: 1

      I've got a Logitech mouse (LX7) that I probably bought about 8 years ago and still use every day at work. The rubber is starting to rot, but the mouse itself works like the day I bought it. The only Logitech mouse that I've had die is an MX310 that I bought in 2004, and that lasted until about 2010.

      --
      It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
    8. Re:MacBook Air 13 Inch by WinterSolstice · · Score: 1

      The 12" Powerbook G4 was the end of my love affair with Apple. Every time I got an MBP, the dang thing would have some mechanical issue (catch fire, lose DVD inside, you name it). That G4 laptop though, it's still going strong with one simple keyboard replacement.

      My wife wrote 5 books on the dang thing, too!

      --
      An operating system should be like a light switch... simple, effective, easy to use, and designed for everyone.
    9. Re:MacBook Air 13 Inch by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Well you could just buy a IDE controller card, they do make them. And can run as cheaply as $9.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    10. Re:MacBook Air 13 Inch by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Three years ago would make it about the right age to qualify for Apple's recall to fix fault SSDs. It's also about the lifetime of the battery pack; even if you had it plugged in the whole time the Air comes with an underpowered PSU and uses the battery to meet peak loads, and heat slowly kills them off anyway.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    11. Re:MacBook Air 13 Inch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My MacBook Air 13-inch from Mid 2011 has been in daily use since I bought it in April 2012. It still runs OS X 10.7 (Lion), although may upgrade once support ends. The only bad thing so far was the power supply failed within 1.5 years, and I had to buy new one (about $80 from Mac Store, no discounts since it was out of warranty).

    12. Re:MacBook Air 13 Inch by infolation · · Score: 1

      talking of music... 1980's digital musical equipment, especially Roland and Yamaha, didn't seem to have obsolescence built-in.

      My Roland MC500 MKII (1988) and Yamaha TX802 (1987) have been gigged around the world & are still going strong.

    13. Re:MacBook Air 13 Inch by narcc · · Score: 1

      A SATA/PATA to USB adapter will set you back a whole 10 dollars. Well worth the investment.

    14. Re:MacBook Air 13 Inch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Analog as well! My Roland/BOSS DS-1 has been rocking with me since 1987 or something. It has seen thousands of gigs and it's still going like a champ. Same goes for my Roland JC-120 amp, it's loud as hell, big, bulky and heavy as a neutron star which makes it virtually indestructible. Also, probably the best clean amp ever made.

    15. Re:MacBook Air 13 Inch by Megane · · Score: 1

      The aluminum-era Powerbooks/MacBook Pros were awful for that. I had three of them, 1 PPC and 2 Intel. The DVD drive would become misaligned with the slot and you had to take it apart to get the disc to eject. Also, the latch to keep it closed wouldn't work, and the skin oils from my palms would etch pits in the top of it. The "unibody" case design was a major and overdue fix for all those problems. The only thing I miss is a matte screen option.

      --
      #naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
    16. Re:MacBook Air 13 Inch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Three years with "almost" no hiccups?

      Sounds like standard to sub-standard to me. Don't pretty much all laptops do this?

    17. Re:MacBook Air 13 Inch by the_digitalmouse · · Score: 1

      A computer that has run for three years. That's so cute!

      Then you would go completely j-pop if you saw my Commodore 64 still doing it's thing as slideshow viewer in a local bowling alley. Only have to re-align the 1541 disk drive head once a year.

      --
      http://about.me/jimm.pratt
    18. Re:MacBook Air 13 Inch by WinterSolstice · · Score: 1

      I'm just happy to hear other people had those issues and found a solution.
      Nearly every person I see now with a Mac is so rabid, I don't know if the problems have been fixed, or just glossed over.

      --
      An operating system should be like a light switch... simple, effective, easy to use, and designed for everyone.
  5. Consoles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Back in the day I played the heck out of my Nintendo Gamecube. Never had an issue with it. HoweverI've been thru two PS2s, 3 Xbox360s, and 3 iPhones.

    1. Re:Consoles by MozeeToby · · Score: 1

      Back in the day I played the heck out of my Nintendo Gamecube.

      God I'm getting old.

    2. Re:Consoles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Me too. I'm not even going to check Wikipedia to find out whether that's older or newer than the Wii.

    3. Re:Consoles by ArcadeMan · · Score: 1

      Let me help you.

      I've still got a NES that works fine apart from the usual cartridge connector issue.

      Still feel old? Alright...

      I've got an Intellivision 1 that still works fine but could use new controllers.

    4. Re:Consoles by omnichad · · Score: 1

      For about $7 on eBay you can get a replacement cartridge connector (not OEM). Maybe you've already done that.

    5. Re:Consoles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Gamecube was definitely built to last - there's a video someone made, I think it's still on Youtube, of them dragging a GCN behind a truck for several miles on an unpaved road, plugging it in and playing Smash Brothers. All of the Nintendo consoles post-GCN have fatal flaws that will stop them lasting very long though. In order:

      DS - No real hardware issues, but a lot of games rely on Nintendo WFC, which is shutting down for good on May 21st. Fortunately will not have the same problems with games that use Real-Time Clock (Boktai, Pokemon) that the GB/GBC did.

      Wii - Relies on an internal NAND to store all of its key operating files (IOS files). The same storage is used to store saves, and is only rated to perform a few hundred thousand write operations. This can largely be worked around by softmodding it and using a hard drive or SD card for storage. Further, many of the few good games on the Wii require Nintendo WFC.

      3DS - Apart from the numerous issues (screen-rub when closed) at launch, relies entirely on an internal NAND to store its firmware (which is proper firmware, unlike what the Wii has). The problem here is that it stores all of your user data (including games downloaded via the E-Shop) onto an SD card. If that SD card dies, you lose EVERYTHING, even stuff you've purchased.

      Wii U - Same problems as the original Wii, more or less.

    6. Re:Consoles by B33rNinj4 · · Score: 1

      Same here! My kids play my old GameCube now, and both the console and the two Wavebirds are going strong.

    7. Re:Consoles by Wolfraider · · Score: 1

      Let me help you even more I still got the original APF TV FUN pong console, still works great. Still feel old??? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A...

  6. HP Calculators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I still use my HP-11C and HP-32S calculators at least weekly. They're now 25+ years old, and I've changed the batteries maybe twice.

    Enter > Equal ..... Yeah!

    1. Re:HP Calculators by mark_reh · · Score: 1

      I, too, have an HP-11C that I still use almost daily and have only changed the batteries twice since I bought it new around 1980.

      Later I got a HP-48SX and the keyboard started out as crap and broke just after the warranty expired. They just don't make them like they used to...

      RPN FTW!

    2. Re:HP Calculators by edremy · · Score: 1

      I got my HP-11 my senior year in high school, 1984, so it's 30 today. Still works. My HP-28s did crap out after 15 years, so I bought a used 48G off of eBay about 10 years ago and that's still going.

      --
      "Seven Deadly Sins? I thought it was a to-do list!"
    3. Re:HP Calculators by sconeu · · Score: 1

      Almost any calculator from that era.

      I have an ancient TI-30 (red LED display) that still runs great.

      Hell, I've got some giveaway 4-function calculators from the early '90s that still work.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    4. Re:HP Calculators by Zaiff+Urgulbunger · · Score: 1

      I have a Sharp EL-506P calculator that is approx. 28 years old that I still use *and* it's still on it's original batteries!

    5. Re:HP Calculators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Still using my HP41C ... it's been through a huge amount of abuse, the screen is cracked, but it still works fine. Don't know what I'll replace it with when it finally dies.

    6. Re:HP Calculators by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1

      I still use my HP-11C and HP-32S calculators at least weekly. They're now 25+ years old, and I've changed the batteries maybe twice.

      Enter > Equal ..... Yeah!

      My 11C and 32C (darn you and your extra memory, Mr. 32S guy. I shoulda waited.) still work, but alas, they are not working all that hard lately. I'm not sure I've ever changed the batteries in the 11C . . .

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
    7. Re:HP Calculators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed.

      I have a HP 15C bought in 1989. Never replaced the batteries. This is incredible low power design for such a long time ago.

    8. Re:HP Calculators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I finished college in 1971. I still have the slide rule I used for all those engineering classes.
      Works fine. Built to last.

    9. Re:HP Calculators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I still use my HP-11C and HP-32S calculators at least weekly. They're now 25+ years old, and I've changed the batteries maybe twice.

      Enter > Equal ..... Yeah!

      Yes, i do it
      Thanks so
      qua tang handmade

    10. Re:HP Calculators by willy_me · · Score: 1

      Someone needs to start a Kickstarter project to create a decent calculator. A solid case and keyboard as per the older HP calculators. Color display - they're common enough. Embedded ARM CPU as you would expect in a cell phone. And similar to a cell phone, a rechargable battery. Add in bluetooth, WiFi, and USB for communication and your hardware is done.

      The interesting part would be on the software end. One could attempt to emulate an HP calculator - but a standard Forth VM would also be interesting. Synchronizing with a PC is a huge area where things could be improved. It would be great to share a workspace with a computer so that once you solve a problem on the calculator - the requred functions would be available on the PC allowing you to automaticaly integrate the solution into your own code / spreadsheet / etc.

      An open calculator design would open up lots of possibilities. Cell phones are great start but regardless of how impressive the software is, it still lacks a physical keyboard. Automatic type correction works great for text - not so much for calculators.

    11. Re:HP Calculators by willy_me · · Score: 1

      An amendment. Forget USB - add inductive charging. Now you do not require any physical ports. The keyboard membrane should be designed so that it also provides a watertight seal between the keyboard and the electronics. Now you have a calculator you can use in the rain, on a ship, or anywhere else you do not want to use a cell phone. Engineers can use it in the field - without taking off any gloves.

    12. Re:HP Calculators by Evtim · · Score: 1

      My father bought me Casio when I began primary school. It has a batery but also 4 small sollar panels of sorts, so it did not work in darkness. Basic aritmetic operation only [fit for 7 year old]. At the moment it's in another country, so I cannot tell you the model. It still works though [and has been used first by me and then by mom and dad]. Let me see, that was...33 years ago. Astonishing!

    13. Re:HP Calculators by gtall · · Score: 1

      And it better have RPN, I still cannot use anything TI ever produced.

    14. Re:HP Calculators by mark_reh · · Score: 1

      The idea is good, but designing a reliable keyboard is the hardest part of the project. I don't think anyone has ever made a keyboard as reliable as the ones in the HP calculators. Maybe you can hunt down the engineer(s) who designed the HP keyboards from the 80s and get them to work on your project, if they're still alive.

      I use RealCalc on my phone and it does a good job of emulating an HP calculator. These days I rarely use the scientific or trig functions.

    15. Re:HP Calculators by jtnix · · Score: 1

      11c here on my desk as well. Use it most every day.

      --
      She blinded me with science, she tricked me with technology. ~ Thomas Dolby
  7. Model M Keyboard FTW by TimeZone · · Score: 4, Insightful

    These things are awesome. The ones I've got were built in the mid 90s and still clicking.
    TZ

    1. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by Sarten-X · · Score: 2

      Damned right.

      I tend to type hard. I've broken a space bar or two. My Model M has put up with me for almost three decades now, and has almost no visible damage. Some of the key caps might be getting a bit worn, but I expect they'll last until I bother to print replacements.

      --
      You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
    2. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by anagama · · Score: 2, Funny

      November 6, 1989 is the date on the sticker on the back of mine.

      I found it in a thrift shop while killing time walking around in a small downtown area waiting for an appointment. It was in a pile of used crappy bubble keyboards. I paid either $5 or $10 for it -- can't remember which. I should have asked if they had any artwork or old vases too.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    3. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by ArcadeMan · · Score: 2

      Apart from cockroaches, the Model M keyboards will be the only things to survive a nuclear blast.

    4. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by Grog6 · · Score: 1

      I bought a bunch of these from a local National Lab for ~$5 each; the oldest one is from '84, iirc.

      I bought them in ~94, and only the one that caught a full cup of coffee has died.

      It was cannibalized for keycaps immediately, lol.

      --
      Truth isn't Truth - Guliani
    5. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by rubycodez · · Score: 2

      mine is the 122 key model (24 function keys, 2x12). weighs over 8 lbs. The coiled cable is thicker than what the old analog phone receivers used to have

    6. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by symbolset · · Score: 1

      The perfect keyboard. They still make 'em, too, but sadly not in a Bluetooth version.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    7. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by BobMcD · · Score: 1

      Using a PS2-to-USB adapter, I take it?

    8. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      I have two. Though one is in rather bad cosmetic condition following a failed attempt to mod it many years ago, it still functions perfectly. Recently taken out of use, but only because I wanted the windows key.

    9. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      I would include the old model 500 telephone in that list as well. On my desk at home I have the old black model 500 phone and model M keyboard, and I will regret the day that my phone company disallows pulse dialing.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    10. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by Nimey · · Score: 1

      Mine was built in February 1988, just a few days after my younger cousin. Works like new, but there are times when I wish for proper USB hotplug and the extra 3 keys.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    11. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by Nimey · · Score: 1

      You can still find new motherboards with one or sometimes even two PS/2 ports.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    12. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      PS2-to-USB adapters are terrible. Even the best ones are laggy and have problems when you press too many keys at once. There are motherboards that still have at least one PS/2 port on them, gigabyte so far has been my favorite brand. It might not have a serial port, printer port or Parallel IDE but it's got a PS/2 port and that's what really matters.

    13. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by Misagon · · Score: 1

      Nah. The plastic nubs holding the barrel plate to the steel backplane tend to break one by one, and then the barrel plate cracks at the hinges. (it was moulded flat)
      Enthusiasts often "bolt mod" their Model M keyboards with missing nubs: cut off the remaining nubs, drill up through the barrel plate and install proper nuts and bolts of steel instead. (not necessarily all in that order)

      --
      "We mustn't be caught by surprise by our own advancing technology" -- Aldous Huxley
    14. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by RR · · Score: 1

      I agree about the Model M. Mine was built in 1991, and I've had it since 2003.

      I use it with my Mac, through a USB adapter. Interestingly, when I set the keyboard preferences to treat the Alt key as Command, it still treats the right Alt key as Option. I don't know if it's something specific to the Model M, or if it's something weird with my generic Holtek-based adapter. I use all 4 modifiers, so that was a bit of a bonus.

      USB adapters are a lemon market. So far, I've tried buying 3 adapters. The Holtek one works well with keyboards, but not mice. The second one works well with mice but not keyboards. The third one doesn't work at all. They're all too cheap to bother returning. This is one way that Amazon, with its incredibly generous return policy, is increasing its retail dominance.

      --
      Have a nice time.
    15. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by WinterSolstice · · Score: 1

      Same here. I have three of these - the one I'm using right now I've used it daily since 1994. Got a 1997 at home, and a 1990 model in the closet waiting for one to die.

      --
      An operating system should be like a light switch... simple, effective, easy to use, and designed for everyone.
    16. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by WinterSolstice · · Score: 1

      The one I use is gray, has a tiny bump connecting a mouse/keyboard PS/2 port, and cost like $20 at Fry's. No brand name, but it works like a champ.

      --
      An operating system should be like a light switch... simple, effective, easy to use, and designed for everyone.
    17. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by nowsharing · · Score: 1

      The Blue Cube PS2-to-USB converter makes them properly hotpluggable, and you can find Linux and Windows scripts/programs to remap keys. F9-F12 and insert are usually my victims.

    18. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by Ksevio · · Score: 1

      bought them in ~94, and only the one that caught a full cup of coffee has died.

      I accidentally dumped a full cup of tea in my 1988 model - the 7 key stopped working, so I had to upgrade

    19. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by shadowknot · · Score: 2

      If you want the Model M experience with a super key and USB connectivity I'd recommend Unicomp. They're a little pricey but provide a very close approximation to the original Model M feel.

    20. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by symbolset · · Score: 2

      This is the same factory, molds, parts and people making this keyboard since Lexmark did the original one for IBM. There is good reason to call it the same keyboard.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    21. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by Miamicanes · · Score: 1

      One caution... the mildly-rare model M13 with pointer stick (manufactured around 1995) has mouse buttons that are pretty fragile & become flaky after just a few years... and the printing on the black one with black keys rubbed off mine within a couple of years (a known issue with white printing on black keys, and the reason why the black ones are particularly rare). Also, the beige plastic insulation on the cable turned brittle and started disintegrating sometime around 2009 (purchased as new-old-stock sometime around 1999). For some reason, this didn't happen to the black keyboard's cable.

      I know I could get the buttons fixed (I own two M13 keyboards... a beige one with white keys, and a black one with black keys), but the keyboards themselves DO seem to be having occasional issues now that they're approaching their 20th birthdays, and the original Trackpoint (I) is a little lacking in the resolution/sensitivity department... it was developed in an era where 1024x768 was a physically huge huge hi-res display, and it's kind of painful to depend upon as the only navigation device in a 3-monitor setup.

    22. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The one I use at work has the original AT-style cord. I use an AT->PS2 adapter and then a PS2->USB adapter to connect it to the PC. I love showing this to anyone whos asks!

    23. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by Shadow+of+Eternity · · Score: 1

      Mate my model M has a 5 pin DIN connector. Din->Ps/2->USB.

      --
      A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
    24. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by greg1104 · · Score: 1

      Lexmark ruined the design with a set of 1994 cost cutting changes. Models from 1995 and later have a noticeably worse typing feel to them. Unfortunately that lower quality 1995+ version is what Unicomp inherited. They make an OK descendent of the Model M design, but it's surely not the same keyboard as the classic design.

    25. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by greg1104 · · Score: 1

      Some of the models from 1993 and 1994 have a drainage channel for spills. See the Design section of Model M Keyboard to find out the model numbers. I consider those the peak of the Model M design. The quality dropped noticeably starting in 1995, due to cost cutting changes also mentioned there.

    26. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by symbolset · · Score: 1

      OK I will give you that. Still a damn fine keyboard though.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    27. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by BulldogJim · · Score: 1

      These things are awesome. The ones I've got were built in the mid 90s and still clicking. TZ

      Agreed, anything IBM. I enjoy the more modern KB-8923 today. His grandpa, Correcting Selectric II, wasn't all that shabby either. Got a nice red one like Hunter Thompson used sitting in my closet. Built mid 60s.

    28. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by gzuckier · · Score: 1

      Apart from cockroaches, the Model M keyboards will be the only things to survive a nuclear blast.

      also the old landline phone system. We got a tour back in high school; they really were engineered to function during emergencies, nuclear war included. That's why I'm keeping mine, even though I can't change the ringtone.

      --
      Star Trek transporters are just 3d printers.
    29. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by Grog6 · · Score: 1

      The best upgrade I've found is the rosewill 9000; it's mech keys, and there are several selections of keys/models.

      I bought a couple to save wear on my good keyboards, and then found out while gaming they have a better keymapping; usb is limited to six keys simultaneously, but the the rosewills using PS2 connection are not limited. :)

      You Can fix the coffee and tea impaired keyboards; I'd pay someone personally. It involves unmelting the plastic spots that hold it all together. Then successfully cleaning and reassembling it.

      If it had screws, I'd think about it, but man... I could resolder the keys back in much better than I can melt the plastic back together correctly. :)

      --
      Truth isn't Truth - Guliani
    30. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by Grog6 · · Score: 1

      The cord that I ended up getting with the keyboards I bought ended up making my day today; I rebuilt an old Isa bus system to use with an MCA card, and I needed a 5 pin pre-ps2 keyboard.

      I bought 5 of those with the models ms, lol.

      I'd love to find one of the ones you have, those come in really handy for programming; there's Nothing like unassigned macro keys. :)

      --
      Truth isn't Truth - Guliani
    31. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by unitron · · Score: 1

      Mine was built in February 1988, just a few days after my younger cousin. Works like new, but there are times when I wish for proper USB hotplug and the extra 3 keys.

      On the keyboard or on your cousin?

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    32. Re:Model M Keyboard FTW by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      the 24 function key ones are on ebay all the time, and you could even use the new ps/2 Unicomp ones with adapter. just look up "ps/2 to AT adapter" on ebay or computer hardware site (adapters going the other way exist too if you have AT keyboard you like and want to use with newer ps/2 port)

  8. Any video game console since the 80s by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    They still work.

  9. Homemade alarmclock from Tandy components by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Still running accurate after 34 years....

  10. HP LaserJet 4M+ by jakedata · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It sits there in standby waiting for print jobs that almost never come, then with a wheeze the top fan blows out the accumulated dust, the lights dim briefly and I get my printout like it was 1999.

    1. Re:HP LaserJet 4M+ by rezme · · Score: 1

      I had to move my LaserJet 4P from the power outlet all I had my server and workstation connected to because it would trip the breaker, but that bastard lasted in my living room for 6 years, after my company had tossed it on the garbage pile because they considered it EOL after they'd used it for 5. Of course, I could watch my power meter spin about 50% faster whenever it cranked up, but that was a damn fine printer.

    2. Re:HP LaserJet 4M+ by anagama · · Score: 2

      I have a Laserjet 4L from 1994 or 95. Until about a year ago, I was still using it in my office to print checks -- it's one of the few printers it's easy to find MICR ink carts for. Anyway, it finally started making terrible screeching noises and so I replaced it because it would be a real pain to be without a check printer. Plus, the 4 page per minute print rate was getting sort of old -- but there is no question, that thing was built to last.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    3. Re:HP LaserJet 4M+ by EvanED · · Score: 1

      I hooked my 4+ up to a Kill-A-Watt.

      I have no idea if the readings are accurate for a momentary power draw, but I swear I saw it register a draw of almost a kilowatt for just one or two readings as it was turning on.

      Mine started accordian jamming. Pulled out the rollers, roughened them up with some sandpaper (got that trick from Wikipedia), and it seems to be back in working order.

    4. Re:HP LaserJet 4M+ by afidel · · Score: 2

      The 4 series was built fairly well, but it was nothing compared to the beast that was the LJ 3 series. I once was called out to repair an ~15 year old LJ3 with just under 1M pages (at ~3PPM!). The reason it needed repair? The single sacrificial plastic gear had grown brittle with age, everything else in that beast was metal.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    5. Re:HP LaserJet 4M+ by hurfy · · Score: 1

      I still have a 4L running at home. Attached to win7 machine with a USB-to-parallel cable even tho I didn't expect that to actually work ;) It randomly spits out some garbage but I just let it run out of paper til I need it again.

      The 4M+ above is very similar to the Laserjet 5 I still use in the office. 16 years and 774150 pages so far...... that sounds pretty long-lasting and hard-working :)

      We used our Wang minicomputer for 16 years before upgrading Y2K (computer was ok, software was an unknown). Pretty sure it still works, i just don't have enough power in my den to check since the hard drive alone wants 1975 watts!

      The 386 we used at that time also works fine and can read and write (add Epson FX printer to printers above!) barcodes still.

    6. Re:HP LaserJet 4M+ by rezme · · Score: 1

      Damn, I wish I'd known about that trick back then, that was exactly the problem I was having with mine. I've had a couple of 100$ all in one laserjets (both HP) since then. The one I've got now (I forget the model) is pretty decent, and obviously doesn't require its own nuclear reactor to print, but I do miss the reliability of that 30 pound monstrosity. I do, however, not miss the 5 degree increase in temperature around the thing when it was running though, lol

    7. Re:HP LaserJet 4M+ by BattleApple · · Score: 2

      I think that's mostly because of the fuser warming up. It has a hollow teflon coated roller with a 9" long lightbulb inside it to heat it. I don't remember them being more than 250-500W though. I used to repair copiers and printers.

    8. Re:HP LaserJet 4M+ by c600g · · Score: 1

      Agreed. The HP LJ 3 series was a workhorse.

      My first ever inkjet printer (HP Deskjet 500) also lasted forever. In fact, I eventually donated it and it still worked - never had an issue with that printer!

    9. Re:HP LaserJet 4M+ by cusco · · Score: 1

      Had an LJ III printer for most of a decade, after one of the executives at my work decided that he wanted a BubbleJet because it took less space (joke was on him). The company had bought a couple of them when they first went into production. When I didn't need to print new resumes every year or two any more my wife finally made me get rid of it in 2010 because it took too much space. Put it on the curb with a sign that said "Works" and it was gone in under an hour. Would not be at all surprised to hear that it's still still pumping out tax returns and kids' homework today.

      --
      "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
    10. Re:HP LaserJet 4M+ by RabidReindeer · · Score: 1

      Damn, I wish I'd known about that trick back then, that was exactly the problem I was having with mine. I've had a couple of 100$ all in one laserjets (both HP) since then. The one I've got now (I forget the model) is pretty decent, and obviously doesn't require its own nuclear reactor to print, but I do miss the reliability of that 30 pound monstrosity. I do, however, not miss the 5 degree increase in temperature around the thing when it was running though, lol

      1KW is about right for one of the old-time laser printers. Warm-up power rush was a bitch and it was recommended not to put them on UPS's or lest they blow breakers.

      I swore off HP devices. Most of the printer/scanner/whatever would still be working fine, but the paper traction would go all to hell and even new roller kits wouldn't fix them. Plus my scanner doesn't even offer replacement rollers for the duplexer part of the machine.

    11. Re:HP LaserJet 4M+ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If that is true, that is a sustained 3-4 % duty cycle for 15 years. Not bad!

    12. Re:HP LaserJet 4M+ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't need MICR toner anymore - banks use optical scanning.

    13. Re:HP LaserJet 4M+ by nowsharing · · Score: 1

      My 2300d spends its life in standby too. 5-10k pages per toner makes it practically free to use, and it does duplexing. I paid $50 for it on CL about 5 years ago, and it came with maxed out ram and a 500-sheet add-on tray.

      My father had a first gen Laserjet (1200d?) in his business, which he had purchased new. It printed thousands of receipts per month and it never had a problem. When he retired, I got him a serial-to-USB adapter and it's now his home printer. Not only are the machines rock solid, but their drivers are as well.

    14. Re:HP LaserJet 4M+ by EvanED · · Score: 1

      Well, there's the overall warmup process that takes 30 seconds or whatever, but what I'm talking about is just a momentary power draw (1/4 of a second or 1/2 a second) when the warmup process starts.

    15. Re:HP LaserJet 4M+ by anagama · · Score: 1

      Well, the Federal reserve disagrees with you. Many banks still use MICR readers to sort and route checks, so not having that on your checks could very well slow down processing of those checks.

      http://www.federalreserve.gov/...

      The extra cost for MICR toner is so negligible anyway, why wouldn't you make your checks as compatible as possible? The only real issue, as I mentioned, is that you can't get MICR toner carts for all printers, so you have to pick a printer with the availability of MICR replacement carts in mind (unless you want to fill your own carts).

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    16. Re:HP LaserJet 4M+ by tsa · · Score: 1

      Those things were almost indestructible. We had one at work that had printed about ten times more than was possible according to its manual before it was replaced.

      --

      -- Cheers!

    17. Re:HP LaserJet 4M+ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1200? First generation? Get the FUCK off my, and everyone else here's, lawn.

      The oldest Laserjet I've ever seen was a IID, oldest I've ever owned was a 3, oldest I've ever actually used was a 4, but thinking that Laserjets after HP started this "model numbers must be in the thousands" idiocy are first generation? Really?

    18. Re:HP LaserJet 4M+ by portnoy · · Score: 1

      Mine is a HP LJ 4000N. 17 years, 36000+ pages, and still going.

  11. My tamagotchi will never die by BisuDagger · · Score: 1

    The hardware in that baby is built to last. Now if only I wouldn't keep forgetting to feed the pet.

  12. LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by sphealey · · Score: 5, Informative

    HP LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 - worked reliably for 20 years and probably quite a few of them still in use.

    sPh

    Admittedly as noted above no high-tech product can yet match the longevity of a well-built plumbing system - some of them are over 2000 years old and still functioning as designed, while most major cities still depend on water and plumbing infrastructure build 1880-1920.

    1. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by Lumpy · · Score: 2

      we have two laserjet II's here that print 300 invoices a day. and we will use them until they catch fire or explode.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    2. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by unfortunateson · · Score: 1

      Those early-generation LaserJets were built like tanks. I've seen them pushed off a table (which took some effort -- the early ones were 70 lbs), hit the floor, and aside from some cosmetic damage, just keep printing. The same-era Digital Equipment Corp LN03 was pretty good too (except for having a toner tub which could spill); corresponding Xerox printers while larger-capacity and faster were much finickier.

      HP and Apple's printers of that generation used the Canon print engine and optics. Whatever happened to that quality?

      --
      Design for Use, not Construction!
    3. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by PRMan · · Score: 2

      We have a LaserJet 5 in the office set up. They were supposed to get our department (in IT) a printer but they never did. So I grabbed a LaserJet 5 that was sitting in a pile and fired it up. Prints great.

      --
      Peter predicted that you would "deliberately forget" creation 2000 years ago...
    4. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by ArcadeMan · · Score: 4, Funny

      You'll probably still use them after they catch fire though.

      We had one at work, the damn thing smelled like a fucking two-cylinder engine puking fumes when it printed even though the prints were fine.

    5. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by newcastlejon · · Score: 2

      One of my college profs offered a plausible-sounding explanation for all the really old things still working (bridges, building, plumbing etc.): simply put, the designers didn't really understand what they were doing, so they just over specced up the wazoo. Of course, if they hadn't built stuff to last, it wouldn't still be around for us to wonder about how it does.

      --
      If God forks the Universe every time you roll a die, he'd better have a damned good memory.
    6. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't even get PEX fittings warrantied more than 1-2 years these days. Some have one O-ring that gets eaten away (or just cracks/turns to powder) as the only protection against leaks. Others will just fail due to fatigue over time. It would be nice to see modern plumbing that works as well as the stuff did in the WWI era.

    7. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by rolfwind · · Score: 1

      Or maybe they didn't try to shave a dime, nickel, or penny off of the cost in all the wrong places.

      I swear most of my stuff that brakes is overwhelmingly not due to a big expensive part, but cheap shit where the labor costs 100x+ more to replace it than the part itself.

      Even in cars, when it's electrical, where the new board or component cost several hundred $$$, the old one only died because some cheap ass component died but hard/uneconomical to track down.

    8. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by sconeu · · Score: 1

      Came here to mention the LJII.

      My father-in-law had one. During the '94 Northridge quake, it fell off the table and hit the ground. We picked it up, plugged it back in, and hooked it back up, and it worked. No problems.

      Sigh... I remember when HP equipment was synonymous with "Sherman Tank".

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    9. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's stuff that lasts and stuff that doesn't. So if you look at something that's been around for a hundred years, well, it won't be the stuff that doesn't last, 'coz that's been in a landfill for 99 years and 6 months. That's why old stuff is quality.

    10. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by beltsbear · · Score: 1

      Unless the floor was concrete, the floor probably suffered more damage. Sometimes the plastic panels come off or break but under that plastic is a very solid metal frame.

    11. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by operagost · · Score: 1

      LJIIs probably smell like that because their corona wires are quite exposed to dust. Have to love being able to open the unit like a clamshell and see most of the guts right there.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    12. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by chuckymonkey · · Score: 1

      We had a LaserJet II when I deployed with the Army in 2003. It had been in constant use all the preceding years and it's the only printer that made it through every single deployment. That thing went all over the desert, was filled with dirt and dust, bounced around in trucks, flown all over the place, shocked, dropped, banged and beaten. As far as I know it still works.

      --
      "Some books contain the machinery required to create and sustain universes."-Tycho
    13. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's more that manufacturing techniques weren't as accurate as they are today, so they had to build thicker or with bigger tolerances to make sure everything worked as it should.

      Nowadays the techniques available let them use the bare minimum material required - they still work as they should when they're new, but no longer have the excess material (read : strength) to deal with unexpected knocks or excessive wear. That's what happens when the pressure is on to make everything cheaper. :(

    14. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by Whatsisname · · Score: 1

      It's also known as Survivorship Bias. Old stuff seems like it was better built because all the crappy stuff already made it into the dumpster and subsequently forgotten long ago.

    15. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by hey! · · Score: 1

      The most wear sensitive part of a laser printer is the copy drum. If I recall correctly the old LaserJets had the drum integrated with the toner cartidge, so you replace to most quickly wearing part of the printer four or five thousand pages. It's no wonder they lasted so long. The mechanical parts that move the paper through the printer are pretty robust, so I wouldn't be surprised if the printers go until the capacitors in the electronics dry up, or the internal power connectors go bad.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    16. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      I swear most of my stuff that brakes is overwhelmingly not due to a big expensive part, but cheap shit where the labor costs 100x+ more to replace it than the part itself.

      You are correct. It usually is the cheap parts that break. That is usually designed in because better to have a cheap part break when something goes wrong rather than an expensive one. Then you'd have 100x+ the part cost and 100x+ the labor cost to fix the item.

    17. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by The_Revelation · · Score: 1

      I'm putting in a vote for the LaserJet 1000 as well. HP really knew how to make virtually maintenance free printers.

    18. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by Technician · · Score: 1

      Clean the corona wires is only 1/2 the solution. Replace the carbon filter. Sometimes with neglect it becomes completely blocked and caked with dust. Pull it out and blow it out on a regular basis.

      FYI, still running a Laserjet III with added memory. It hangs on my lan on a Trendnet 1P Printserver.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    19. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by O'Bunny · · Score: 1

      We have a LJ4V bought to do tabloid-sized stuff. The only problem with it is that there are no toner cartridges any more. HP quit making them, and the new-old-stock ones all have internal parts that have lost their plasticizers and cause everything to print grey. Sad...

    20. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      PEX fittings do not have o-rings.

    21. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      Sherman Tanks are actually lightly armored medium tanks. HP LaserJets are more like Abrams Tanks.

    22. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by qfman · · Score: 0

      I love the 4MV at my lab. Gong strong! My palm III is also a great device that still works great. Not only that but it is useful even when you are out of cell range. Sadly all the new great "stupid phones" are only good for taking pictures if you are out of cell range. All I want is are reliable tide table and my phone is worthless for that.

      --
      They who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety.
    23. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The mechanics in the LaserJet 3 and earlier are made by Canon.

      I really like them. The IBM 4019 from the same era was probably underrated though.

    24. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by toddestan · · Score: 1

      There are third-party aftermarket cartridges out there for a lot of the older HP lasers. I get them from Monoprice. Very reasonably priced and I haven't had any problems with them.

  13. Engineered for a beating by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My son is a destroyer of technology. Well, not just technology- I bet he could break a ball bearing. I'm amazed that he has yet to kill any one of the Xbox controllers. They're grimy, and surely a biohazard, but they take a punishment way more than say the old Atari one-button joysticks of my youth ever could have.

  14. Commodore 64 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Breadbox model. Still working after 30 years.

  15. Anything built before 2001 by Lumpy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The quality difference between pre 2001 electronics and now is astounding. Current products are all utter junk compared to earlier stuff.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    1. Re:Anything built before 2001 by jellomizer · · Score: 4, Interesting

      There were junk devices back then too.
      I got a $15.00 mouse that worked for 2 month and failed.
      Laptop Drives were notoriously bad. Memory could fail on you...
      I needed to get a new internal modem every few months.

      The real difference before 2001 we were expected to pay a couple of grand on your PC. and a lot more for a workstation. Because these things were so expensive they made sure they used quality parts. Post Tech Bubble pop. We started to opt for cheaper/faster/lighter So cheaper and Lighter means more flimsy plastic, where metal was used, but we wanted faster too so they had to cut costs in more areas of quality. Having it last 4 now is considered a good run.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    2. Re:Anything built before 2001 by egarland · · Score: 5, Insightful

      We always get a false impression of the reliability and quality of old stuff, because the stuff that sucked and broke got thrown out years ago, and the only things that we still encounter are the ones that were well made. It's true with old houses, old cars, old furniture, pretty much everything. I'm sure there's a law for this phenomenon with some pompous dude's name on it but it's a well established and discussed phenomenon.

      --
      set softtabstop=4 shiftwidth=4 expandtab nocp worlddomination
    3. Re:Anything built before 2001 by mlts · · Score: 1

      I remember an early 1990s computer case for a generic 386 (back when we had hundreds of beige box makers.) It had multiple cam locks (Medeco or Ace, forgot which), as well as a keyswitch. It wasn't made out of tinfoil sheet metal as today's cases, the thickness had to be at least 1/8 of an inch. That case was used and reused by a friend of mine because it just worked without issue, and why waste something that well made.

      I wouldn't mind going back to the days of repair rather than replace. Better off to pay twice as much for something and be able to maintain/expand/upgrade it than have it break or go obsolete and contribute to more landfill clutter.

    4. Re:Anything built before 2001 by darkwing_bmf · · Score: 5, Informative

      We always get a false impression of the reliability and quality of old stuff, because the stuff that sucked and broke got thrown out years ago, and the only things that we still encounter are the ones that were well made. It's true with old houses, old cars, old furniture, pretty much everything. I'm sure there's a law for this phenomenon with some pompous dude's name on it but it's a well established and discussed phenomenon.

      I believe the term you are looking for is Survivorship bias.

    5. Re:Anything built before 2001 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I propose we call that concept egarland's postulate.

    6. Re:Anything built before 2001 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is survivor bias.

      Its like when people see tanks of cars from the 70s and say 'they dont build them like that anymore'. What they do not realize is the amount that got thrown out...

    7. Re:Anything built before 2001 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While true, I honestly don't see any electronic, or well, anything outside of the kitchen from 2005-2009 around me, while there's a lot of stuff from before and after. Its not just in electronic either. While generally better insulated and more energy efficient, if you buy a house today anywhere that's not way up north, you'll replace/repair stuff way more frequently than one that was built using techniques from a few decades ago (and your floor will most likely vibrate every time someone sneezes).

      An original gameboy, gameboy pocket, or gameboy SP is freagin undestructible. A 3ds? Sneeze too loud and its over. The DS light was somewhat acceptable I guess...

    8. Re:Anything built before 2001 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any pre 2001 device that has survived to date must have been high quality to start with. But do you remember all the ones that went to the junkyard? The thing with tech quality is that it costs, most consumers would rather pay less. You get what you pay for in the end.

    9. Re:Anything built before 2001 by Mycroft-X · · Score: 1

      We could call it survivorship bias

    10. Re:Anything built before 2001 by fufufang · · Score: 1

      I'm sure there's a law for this phenomenon with some pompous dude's name on it but it's a well established and discussed phenomenon.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B...

    11. Re:Anything built before 2001 by wile_e_wonka · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up. This is absolutely true. For example, listen on Car Talk to "Click and Clack" discuss how cruddy cars used to be and how much better and more reliable cars are nowadays. Compare a mid-90s Hyundai Excel to Hyundais now, for example.

    12. Re:Anything built before 2001 by s122604 · · Score: 1

      It's especially bad with cars because of the emotional attachment. The reality is that across the scope of brands cars are better, much better, than they have ever been.

      Getting a car to 100,000 miles without major drivetrain work used to be nothing short of a miracle, now the consumer gets pissed if it doesn't happen.

      One thing is to look at stock photos of traffic from the 60's and 70's and earlier. The vast majority of the vehicles would be within a few model years of the photograph date. Go into a parking lot in a middle class area now, and you'll see no shortage of cars from the late 90s and early 00's.

    13. Re:Anything built before 2001 by Paco103 · · Score: 1

      I used to keep a stock shelf of modems. When I found them on sale, I'd buy 2 or 3. This was in the 56k Winmodem era when you could pick them up for $5-10 or free after rebate. The older hardware based ones were too expensive, but fortunately also more reliable it seemed.

    14. Re:Anything built before 2001 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I agree with the comment and I think there very often is bias involved. There are some areas where, in general, things did have higher build quality. The easiest example for me to think of at the moment is Car Audio products from the early to mid 90s, and more specifically within that broad category: Amplifiers. If you purchased a car amplifier from the mid 90s from a good company (PPI, Rockford, SoundStream, a/d/s, Phoenix Gold, etc), chances are it still just works and if not it will likely be a pretty easy fix with a little electronics background.

      Around the mid to late 90s a large number of the amplifier manufacturers were purchased, designs were changed such that a single design was used for multiple different brands with just some rebadging and case design differences, and manufacturing was offshored to places where build quality wasn't tightly monitored. As a result of the afforementioned changes the newer lines of amplifiers (in general, there are still some good manufacturers out there) often are replaced rather than repaired and are replaced far more often. A few years is now a pretty good run, based on what I've seen, meanwhile all of the mid 90s amplifiers I own (over 20) still test as meeting or exceeding their specs, with a few of them seeing daily use in my own car. Of the many old school amplifiers I own, in the 15-20 years I've had them, only one of them has had any issues (a single blown channel, easily repaired). Of the newer amplifiers I've owned, a good 80 percent have died a very painful death and let the magic smoke out, not due to increased complexity, but due to poor build quality. When the newer amps failed they did so spectacularly, and would cost more to repair than to replace. So, I've decided to stick with the older models because while they may be less efficient and as a result generate more heat and they may not put out massive amounts of power, they just work every single time and take every bit of abuse I can throw their way without skipping a beat.

    15. Re:Anything built before 2001 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The largest issue I see with the phrase you get what you pay for is that paying more doesn't necessarily get you anything better than paying less. Also, in certain cases like apple, you can't purchase a little bit of value, you either get a whole lot of value for your money at a large price, or you get nothing.

    16. Re:Anything built before 2001 by King_TJ · · Score: 1

      That's partially the case, but especially with certain categories of items, there are demonstrably "better" and "worse" time periods to have purchased them.

      For example, when it comes to homes, you can find a large number of people in real estate or aspects of home repair/improvement who will tell you that in general, in the USA, the best built homes are from the late 1800's through the 1920's. (Among other things, the wood framing typically used old growth forest lumber, which you just won't ever see in use on more modern homes. Many also had such features as corrugated, galvanized steel sheet roofing -- which was designed to last around 100 years, vs. the typical asphalt shingles which are rated for as little as a 10 year lifespan.)

      With computer technology, it's not that difficult to compare and contrast the early personal computers of the 1980's with what's typically sold today, and see a BIG difference in build quality. Who builds keyboards with steel frames around the keycaps these days? Look at the difference in sturdiness of the typical enclosure. Heck, the entire case of the Apple //e was metal! Look at the old dot matrix printers from companies like Epson or Okidata.... I'd say the majority of them you run across these days still work, 30 years or more after they were manufactured. Most were simply cast aside as completely obsolete before they actually broke down. (I used to know a guy who loved buying them cheap just to rip the servo motors out of them for robotics projects.)

    17. Re:Anything built before 2001 by cusco · · Score: 1

      Friend of my folks once told me, "Do you know why a '56 Chevy is so expensive? Because they were such pieces of crap that people would just abandon them by the side of the road after they broke down the 100th time. The replacement parts in the few that survive are ten times the quality of the originals."

      Kind of sad that the cars my generation learned to drive on hardly survive at all. For that matter, the whole concept of a Pinto, Vega or Gremlin being a "classic car" just seems absurd.

      --
      "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
    18. Re:Anything built before 2001 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Logitech Click! Optical mouse OEM. Made in China. Definitely made pre 2001 as I was playing multiplayer Diablo II on it instead of learning for my exams ;) No mouse before was that durable. I still use it. The buttons are losing some color as well as where my hand rests on it. Still going strong.

    19. Re:Anything built before 2001 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The quality difference between pre 2001 electronics and now is astounding. Current products are all utter junk compared to earlier stuff.

      I have stuff from before 2001 that has lasted over two decades. Nothing made after that has lasted more than 13 years!

    20. Re:Anything built before 2001 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Getting a car to 100,000 miles without major drivetrain work used to be nothing short of a miracle, now the consumer gets pissed if it doesn't happen.

      On the other hand, in the past there were cars that could do 1,000,000 miles (e.g., http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercedes-Benz_W124 still running as taxis today, and that not only in poor parts of the world).

      20 years from now we shall see if any of those built today make it.

    21. Re:Anything built before 2001 by TheGoodNamesWereGone · · Score: 1

      I'd argue that it *was* true in some cases. There are still a lot of air-cooled VW Beetles being used as daily drivers and I had one too until recently. I currently drive a 1989 Volvo 240, every day. Tough as a block of iron and reliable.

    22. Re:Anything built before 2001 by zorro-z · · Score: 1

      Interestingly enough, I had a conversation similar to this today, except about houses. A co-worker was commenting that she'd never lived in new construction. I mentioned to her that old houses tended to be better- today- not because "they built 'em better back then," but because time had weeded out anything that *wasn't* well-built. Plenty of shite houses were built in the mid 1800s; they didn't last until today, while the well-built ones did.

      It's kind of self-selecting: any old tech that's still useful today was *obviously* well-made, whenever "back then" was. It doesn't mean that *everything* made "back then" was of equal quality.

      --
      -Z
    23. Re:Anything built before 2001 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not to mention, in those days, computers actually became obsolete, as in a 5 year old PC was pretty useless, now a 5 year old PC is (for most applications) indistinguishable from one off the shelf.

    24. Re:Anything built before 2001 by Spock2001 · · Score: 1

      As is the price difference! I paid $3000 each for my 1991 PC system with all peripherals & my 1997 PC system. They both still work aside from some of the peripherals which failed eventually ('97 monitor, HD & CDROM) ('91 5.25" floppy). As you can see the older the lower the failure rate. Add to that a LONG list of old stuff: 1980 Sony record player, 1980 Toshiba TV, 1980 Clock radio (and it has the only cassette player that still works!), 90's VCR & TV.

    25. Re:Anything built before 2001 by tsa · · Score: 1

      My father always had Simcas in the 1970s. Those cars were so bad that people who were born in the 1980s probably can't even imagine it. It was normal for those cars to be totally rusted through in places after three years. Still, they were very popular at the time.

      --

      -- Cheers!

    26. Re:Anything built before 2001 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lead free solder, smaller gate sizes in ic's, using cheaper parts eg: cheap capacitors. I a guarantee that new stuff will break eventually.

      As with this list its all old stuff that was built to last. (before built in obsolescence)

      I dont know how many times the electronics place i worked at (albeit in software department) said dry solder joints are one of the most common reasons for devices not working. (which happens more often with lead free solder).

      I dont want lead in solder but i want better recycling of stuff when it breaks.

    27. Re:Anything built before 2001 by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Well, Hyundai has come a long way. On the other hand, compare a mid-90's Toyota Camry to a new one. The new one may have a lot more gadgets and features, but the 90's Camry is a much more solid, better built car whereas the new ones are basically what's left after 15 years of decontenting and cost cutting.

    28. Re:Anything built before 2001 by warpuck · · Score: 0

      Boston Accustics Receptor (Mono version) except for them stick on rubber feet that end sticking to the night stand. Altek Lansing AS 890 PC speakers have been breaking leases for 12 years.

    29. Re:Anything built before 2001 by warpuck · · Score: 0

      I think cell phones have a destruct timer built in to them. I think they should just play the MIssion Impossible theme say, sorry Phelps this device will self destruct in 5 seconds.

  16. The clear winner overall is so obvious by Tumbleweed · · Score: 4, Informative

    IBM's Model M keyboard.

    1. Re:The clear winner overall is so obvious by Lazere · · Score: 1

      I dunno. Sure, you could use it as a weapon if your house got broken into and then type up the police statement on it, but I've got an old LG flip phone that could survive the Model M beating.

    2. Re:The clear winner overall is so obvious by cschepers · · Score: 1

      The Model M I use at work is 25 years old and shows almost no wear. And I could bludgeon anyone who tried to steal it.

  17. Clock Radio! by catseye · · Score: 2

    A 1971 Panasonic AM/FM clock radio with this erie, blue-green glowing, segmented time display. It's the size of a goddamn shoe box, and easily weighs 3-4 pounds. It was my brother's, and when he moved out of the house he gave it to me. It's as old as I am and has survived multiple in-city, in-state, and one cross-country move, in addition to numerous drops, bumps, being rained on through open windows, splashed with various items spilled from ill-placed glasses, etc.

    I haven't used it as an alarm or for music in years (my phone took over those functions some time ago), but I can't bear to remove it from my nightstand at this point.

    --
    What did the walrus say to the penguin? "No soap, radio."
    1. Re:Clock Radio! by ThosLives · · Score: 1

      Mine is similar - I have a GE AM/FM alarm clock radio with red LED segmented display, but mine is a bit newer - I got I think in 1993. 21 years is pretty good - 100% fully functional (go go pre-ROHS analog radio!) and still keeps accurate time. Only thing wrong with it is the tab on the 9V backup battery compartment broke, so the door falls off if you lift the thing off the nightstand. I refuse to keep my phone by my bedside, so I still use the alarm function.

      Contrast to a new one - it was either Emerson or Panasonic, can't remember which - I bought while on an extended work trip where I was put up in an apartment. This was in 2008, and the clock was so inaccurate it would gain 15 minutes a month.

      --
      "There are a dozen opinions on a matter until you know the truth. Then there is only one." - CS Lewis (paraprhase)
    2. Re:Clock Radio! by WaywardGeek · · Score: 1

      This may not count, but my great-great-grandfather's gold pocket watch, built in 1891, just passed the "chronometer" tests, gaining no more than 3 seconds or loosing 6 in a 24 hour period. Heck, back then they didn't even design them to be that accurate.

      --
      Celebrate failure, and then learn from it - Nolan Bushnell
    3. Re:Clock Radio! by Paul+Davis · · Score: 1

      Mine's a GE AM/FM digital clock radio from about 1975 and I still use it as my alarm and clock by my bed. I had to replace the internal speaker at one point, but otherwise it still works perfectly.

      One feature that I really like is that the time and alarm setting have a reverse feature so it's easy to adjust the alarm forward or back.

      Other old stuff still in use that all works perfectly:
      - IBM M series keyboard
      - Radio Shack multimeter - about 35 years old
      - Nikko stereo receiver - about 30 years old

  18. Repair Documentation... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It all depends on the level of documentation the manufacturer provides... So, anything made by a before about the mid 80's, back in the good ol' days when manufacturers published repair documentation, and OMGWTFBBQ schematics.....

    My Tektronix 561B is still going strong thank you very much......

  19. IBM model m keyboard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have one on each and every computer I use and they are ~25 yo.

    1. Re:IBM model m keyboard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Or Unicomp's clones - no signs of troubles after many years of abuse.

    2. Re:IBM Model M Keyboard by n1ywb · · Score: 1

      I bought one. A week later my wife spilled soda on it. Turned out it was pretty much impossible to salvage. I was disappointed by it's lack of servicability vs. a real Model M. You spend that kind of money on a keyboard you might expect it to survive a soda or at least be repairable.

      --
      -73, de n1ywb
      www.n1ywb.com
    3. Re:IBM Model M Keyboard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All this talk of soda spills is funny.

      Reminds me of this time I knocked over a two liter of Mountain Dew, all over my Model-M. I let the ants have at it and never had an issue with it.

    4. Re:IBM Model M Keyboard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have several. Wouldn't use anything else.

    5. Re:IBM Model M Keyboard by greg1104 · · Score: 1

      The Model M was redesigned by Lexmark in 1994 to use lighter, cheaper components. All of the units from 1995 and later are substandard compared to the earlier ones. The backplate is just one of the problems.

      Engineered quality peaked with the 1993 and 1994 models that were updated to have a liquid drainage channel.

  20. test gear that was made in USA in the 50s and 60s by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I always like to point to one of my fave brands of TM gear (test and measurement): power designs.

    go to ebay and search for these 3 words 'power designs precision'. see the metal concentric dials? those are not to be seen in today's gear; unless its a photo of one on a touch screen somewhere (sigh).

    I have at least 4 of these models and they date from the late 50's to early 60's. some caps might need changing (not need but suggested) and some deoxit-d5 cleaner on the switches and that's that! 100uV dial-in resolution, microvolt level noise and hum, current load at full rated cap for 7x24 duty cycle and the PSU can be thrown off a truck and still work to factory specs.

    they tend to be $100 or so, used. if you built that today using those specs, it would be 10x to 50x the price, if you could even GET it built today (no, china could not even build this if they tried).

    old tektronix and HP gear still works great after 30+ yrs. lots of old US designed and BUILT gear is still fully reasonable to use today. its repairable and the user guides, back then, actually had circuit descriptions, schematics and even names/addresses of companies that make the parts that go into the box! you NEVER see anything like that today. you can't even get schematics from agilent or fluke or keithley or tek anymore, on their current gear.

    I like to point to power designs (precision) line of gear as stuff that was built to last 50+ yrs and I have actual proof that this is not a dream. I'm over 50 and I'm not doing as well as some of the gear in my tech shop.... ;)

    --

    --
    "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  21. Compaq ML370 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Running Netware 4.11

  22. Casio F-91W by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Casio F-91W: Bought one for my son about 6 years ago and it's been through the wash, left outside, lost and found and it still works. Later found it's used for bomb timers but that's probably security theatre nonsense.

    1. Re:Casio F-91W by Joce640k · · Score: 1

      There's people in Guantanamo whose only crime is to wear one of those: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      --
      No sig today...
  23. My tamagochi still works just fine by Tyrannicsupremacy · · Score: 0

    Not to mention my pogs, but i think those might not contain ICs...

    --
    http://i.cubeupload.com/T6cyLu.png
  24. Household appliances by HockeyPuck · · Score: 1

    Toaster Oven... a 25yr old Hamilton Beach Standmixer. Though there's probably a few people out there with ones older than this.

    I still use the same lawnmower I bought in '79. Had to replace the blade, but it still cuts the grass without problems.

    1. Re:Household appliances by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      High end stand mixers in general are basically made to last you until retirement, give or take a decade. We have a KitchenAid stand mixer here, and after 5 years there isn't a scratch on it, and if I clean it, I could probably resell it as new (if i still had the box).

    2. Re:Household appliances by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      KitchenAid stand mixers when they were made in the US; KitchenAid was owned by Hobart then, who made (make?) commercial and industrial mixers. They were well built and there's a _lot_ of 30+ year old units still in regular use.

  25. Microsoft Windows XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Because it is that good.

    Though I stopped using it as a daily with 7. And now that I think about it, XP is a dog compared to 7. Ugly as a butt muncher, too, and as clunky as a car made in Putin's Russia. But this isn't about that, then, is it.

    1. Re:Microsoft Windows XP by istartedi · · Score: 2

      XP on my ThinkPad that was made before IBM sold the division to Lenovo. The machine will be 10 in August. The battery died a few years ago, otherwise the only problem is with the left mouse button which is cracked from use and held with tape. The machine chugs along in some punishing environments--no AC here, and it flakes out sometimes on hot days. I probably need to open it up and blow the dust out. Yes, I'm concerned about such an old hard drive, and back up in various ways.

      About $1500, and worth every penny.

      --
      For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  26. Casio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    PRG-60T this watch is I think like 10 years old and it works like new, this thing was with me all around our planet, got few G forces from flying gliders/airplanes and another few from driving a sport bike and it just do not wants to die.... built like tank with titanium strap and you don't need to replace any battery, I'm giving it 10 stars.

  27. Teletype machines by Animats · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I have several Teletype machines from the 1926 to 1940 period. All are in good working order. They're completely repairable; it's possible to take one apart down to the individual parts and put it back together. But they're high-maintenance. There are several hundred oiling points on a Model 15 Teletype. There are things that have to be adjusted occasionally, and manuals and tools for doing that. Every few years, the entire machine has to be soaked in solvent to clean off excess oil, then relubricated and adjusted. This is the price of building a complex machine good for a century or more.

    (The Model 33 of the minicomputer era is not one of the long-lived machines. This was by design. The Model 35 was the equivalent long-lived, high-maintenance product; the 33 required little mainenance but had a llimited life.)

  28. Dumbphone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    old school brick/candybar cellphones. Nokia's a great one, there are other manufacturers. Point is - if I had to bet on an iPhone or Android going through the wash and surviving, or an dumb-phone surviving I'd bet old school. Some old Nokias from the late 90s (the digital ones) are still making phonecalls, and probably could until the sun goes supernova.

    1. Re:Dumbphone by sphealey · · Score: 1

      Western Electric desk phones. Had to buy one on eBay to replace a string of junky modern ones that failed within a year each; the WE phone was manufactured around 1970 per the serial number.

      sPh

    2. Re:Dumbphone by hurfy · · Score: 1

      Yup, forgot about my old Conair Trimline phone. Over 30 years old and knocked off the desk a few hundred times by now probably. hehe, my other phone is like the 2nd touchtone model from AT&T.

    3. Re:Dumbphone by SethBrown · · Score: 1

      My Nokia 6230b just gave up the ghost this week. Loved that phone. It's fallen off my motorbike, hit the ground, broke into 4 pieces. I put them back together and it worked. So I bought me another Nokia. Let's see how long that one will last.

  29. Sun Sparc. US Robotics. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sun Sparcstation5s seem to last pretty well, but I have not booted mine in a while. I have a US Robitics 56k modem that works fine. I have some Sun AXi's that run (OpenBSD) when I need them. The bank reposessed my PDP11s about 20 years ago. Cant get any of my floppy drives to work, and I have at least 5.

  30. TOA Amplifier by badger_borat · · Score: 1

    TOA public address amplifier, still going strong.

  31. My suggestions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft Intellimouse Optical. The only truly good thing to ever come out of that company. Released in 2000 and still going strong here. Actually had some scroll wheel problems for a few years but mostly resolved itself.

    Alternately, Sanyo-MBC 55x computer series, released 1982. More rugged than the mouse by far. Just not much software to run on it, but I use it regularly as an offline encrypted password store.

  32. Office printer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Our canon ir2200 is at least 11 years old and it may outlive us all.

  33. As a cyclist: Garmin Edge 500 GPS Computer by Vegan+Cyclist · · Score: 1

    Really impressed with how it's held up over the years, including the battery.

  34. IBM Model M Keyboard by ErichTheRed · · Score: 1

    Typing this on a Unicomp model based on the original design. Awesome keyboard, but it lacks the heavy steel backplate of the original.

    Please buy a keyboard from this company so they keep making them. :-) http://www.pckeyboard.com/

    Generally, any computer equipment before the mid 90s was made quite well, simply because it was so expensive at the time. It also tended to be heavily over-engineered. Some Compaq ProLiants from that era are 100 pounds because they're just solid metal all the way through.

  35. Alarm clock???? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Alarm Clock? Really?

    I used to live across the street from police & fire stations. I can sleep through anything. A few years ago, searching for ever louder and more earth-shaking alarm clocks, I got to thinking about that. For tens of thousands of years mankind has not had alarm clocks. We relied on the Sun and Daylight to wake us up. So I went down to the local megamart and bought a digital outlet timer. You know, the sort of thing you use to turn your lights on automatically while you're out of town. Hooked up a power strip to it, and plugged in a bunch of $5 floor lamps. Nothing like a Redundant Array of Inexpensive Lamps.

    Every morning at exactly 6:55 the digital timer turns on and my room is brightened by 5,000+ lumens of light. It's a nice way to wake up. Very gentle. You come out of sleep slowly rather than abruptly.

    1. Re:Alarm clock???? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like this idea and may adopt it!

    2. Re:Alarm clock???? by Quirkz · · Score: 1

      That's a curious take. I'm not sure I'd trust myself to actually wake up, though I guess I could keep the sound-based alarm as a backup until I was sure. I've also got young kids and occasionally have a *really* short night of sleep, which again makes me think I might sleep though light on bad days.

      It's certainly not quite as efficient on the power side of the spectrum, but I'd guess not bad if it's just a few minutes. How do you tell the alarm "okay, turn off now, I'm up"? Just set the timer for x minutes and assume it'll be enough?

    3. Re:Alarm clock???? by cyn1c77 · · Score: 1

      Alarm Clock? Really?

      I used to live across the street from police & fire stations. I can sleep through anything. A few years ago, searching for ever louder and more earth-shaking alarm clocks, I got to thinking about that. For tens of thousands of years mankind has not had alarm clocks. We relied on the Sun and Daylight to wake us up. So I went down to the local megamart and bought a digital outlet timer. You know, the sort of thing you use to turn your lights on automatically while you're out of town. Hooked up a power strip to it, and plugged in a bunch of $5 floor lamps. Nothing like a Redundant Array of Inexpensive Lamps.

      Every morning at exactly 6:55 the digital timer turns on and my room is brightened by 5,000+ lumens of light. It's a nice way to wake up. Very gentle. You come out of sleep slowly rather than abruptly.

      What if your significant other doesn't want to wake up at the same time that you do?

    4. Re:Alarm clock???? by megalomaniacs4u · · Score: 1

      It sounds like a lovely idea but unfortunately I once spent a week in hospital and learnt to sleep with lights blazing...

    5. Re:Alarm clock???? by hackertourist · · Score: 1

      Look up Philips Wake-up Light. The same idea, but with gradually brightening light instead of instant sunshine.

    6. Re:Alarm clock???? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a really cool idea. I shall experiment with that sometime.

    7. Re:Alarm clock???? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing like a Redundant Array of Inexpensive Lamps.

      I've always wondered why the Navy and others were so interested in RAIL-guns. Obviously they want to make their enemies wake up earlier than necessary.

    8. Re:Alarm clock???? by toddestan · · Score: 1

      I would assume that once you're up you would turn the lights back off for them. It's not like the audible alarm clock won't wake them up either. Though with the lights you could get some spot lights and aim them at your side of the bed in attempt to make it less disturbing.

    9. Re:Alarm clock???? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I tried this, and didn't work, I just pulled the covers over my head and went back to sleep. Once, in a pinch, I had a 200w halogen floor light with an adjustable head, took a timer like you described, and pointed it next to my head in the bed. There was enough light to go through the covers, and I woke up feeling the heat gently frying my cheek.

  36. Amana Radar Range by hambone142 · · Score: 1

    Built like a tank in the late 1960s. Outlasted two "Generally Defective" (G.E.) Chinese pieces of crap that I've had for the last five years. The only reason I stopped using it is the knobs on it are getting worn out. I think I'm just going to fix them and go back.

    1. Re:Amana Radar Range by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My parents had one for decades. I almost ended up moving out with it but it finally broke down and the repair guy said it would be a couple hundred $ to repair so they pitched it and bought a cheap $100 POS that lasted a year or two, at which point they bought another one. I think they finally splurged and bought one that has lasted 10 years so far.

      The recipe book that came with it though? I still have it. Get yourself a gallon-sized casserole and turn to the italian spaghetti sauce recipe. I loved it when my mom made it, I love it when I make it ;)

    2. Re:Amana Radar Range by FirstOne · · Score: 1

      hmm, robust electronic items,

      I use a 24 year old Panasonic turntable microwave (uP driven, w lcd display) on a daily basis..

      I also use a 28 year old uP controlled, Kenmore microwave-convection oven on a weekly basis.

      Everything else has long since been retired, RS-coco's, Sinclair Z8, 8088,286, 386, 486, pentium, celeron pc's, aimga 1000/3000, VME stuff, etc They all consume too much electricity/limited functionality to be of much value these days.

      These days I use modern quad core laptop with 24" external LCD, ARM based Linux server, and a few other low energy consumption(Android) tech toys of recent vintage for daily use.

    3. Re:Amana Radar Range by Ol+Biscuitbarrel · · Score: 1

      I prefer the original Radar Ranges. Why, you could cook a whole turkey with those buggers! Sometimes inadvertently, too.

    4. Re:Amana Radar Range by Megane · · Score: 1

      I regularly use one with a keypad and digital timer, so no knobs to wear out, but still a genuine Amana RadarRange. Got it for $25 at Goodwill back in 2000 or so.

      --
      #naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
  37. Microsoft Optical Mouse by Computershack · · Score: 1

    Microsoft Optical mouse, the basic white model with just the scroll wheel. I've had it well over a decade.The bottom is perfectly smooth now but it refuses to die. Best money I've ever spent. A friend of mine is still rocking a Nokia 6310i and refuses to part with it.

    --
    I only please one person per day. Today is not your day. Tomorrow isn't looking good either. - Scott Adams
    1. Re:Microsoft Optical Mouse by afidel · · Score: 1

      Not if you got a first generation, the first ones had a design flaw that caused the wires to wear out where they came into the case (hard 90 degree bend). MS to their credit had the design fixed (Logitech was the ODM) and covered replacements for like 5 years even without proof of purchase, you just needed a first generation serial number.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
  38. PowerBook G4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The powerbook g4 is 11 years old and still running

  39. HP48g by aaaaaaargh! · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Still works like a charm (and still a bit slow, hehehe).

    1. Re:HP48g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Both my 48g and the 24c it replaced are still going strong.
      Both were phenomenally amazing products for their day.

    2. Re:HP48g by PRMan · · Score: 1

      I didn't think about calculators, but my daughter is still using my Casio FX-4000P in high school.

      Mine looks about exactly like this (except in English):

      http://mycalcdb.free.fr/galerie/Casio/casio_fx-4000P.7.jpg

      I also have an HP 28S that still works great (although it has a really bad interface):

      https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0b/HP_28.jpg

      --
      Peter predicted that you would "deliberately forget" creation 2000 years ago...
    3. Re:HP48g by jandrese · · Score: 2

      I still use my TI-85 I got back in the 90s. The nice thing is that it's not too different than a "modern" TI calculator, and it lasts forever on a set of AAAs. I'll probably pass it down to my son when he's going to take the SATs or something.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    4. Re:HP48g by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HP 55, use it every day, red led (claw) display
      Layfayette multi-meter TE-13. A gift when I was 9.

    5. Re:HP48g by MrNiceguy_KS · · Score: 1

      I went back to college this semester, and prior to our first test, I dug out the Casio scientific calculator I originally got for Algebra 1 in 8th grade. Had to put a new battery in it, but it worked fine.

      When I pulled it out in class, I realized that, purchased in 1991, it was several years older than all of my classmates.

      --
      Redundancy is good And also good.
    6. Re:HP48g by Kaldaien · · Score: 1

      I made the mistake of buying a Ti-89 in the 90s... I liked its higher resolution screen but because it had a symbolic algebra solver it was not allowed on the SATs so I had to do the SATs without a calculator.

      Later, when I took the GREs and they didn't allow a calculator of any sort I felt vindicated :P

      The SATs are a total joke. They have been trying to make them more GRE-like, but I don't think they'll ever be able to get to the point where they expect High School students to do simple arithmetic without a calculator. That is a skill I picked up in college, as funny as that sounds. It's something you're supposed to learn in elementary school, but because of the prevalence of calculators it doesn't take long before students (myself included) simply forget from lack of actual practice.

      As for not being different from a modern Ti calculator, I beg to differ on that one. Have you seen the Ti NSpire? They're color now and finally TI solved the issue of symbolic algebra by selling two versions - one with the feature and one without.

  40. The entire Laserjet 4 line by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nuff said. I've been working in IT since 2002, and still they continue to work.

  41. Kinesis Advantage Keyboard by ginoledesma · · Score: 1

    I'ved used my Kinesis Advantage keyboard since 2004, but I know it saw some use before I took ownership of it.

    It's my trusted keyboard that I've brought along different jobs. I have my friends and former coworkers to thank for in turning me onto this device.

    1. Re:Kinesis Advantage Keyboard by omnichad · · Score: 1

      How does that compare to the newer Microsoft Natural Keyboard? I won't give up on a split keyboard, but I might consider a new one. The key labels on the MS Natural Keyboard wear out too fast. I don't need them, but it doesn't look nice with worn labels.

      How much typing force is needed? How easy is it to clean? How quiet is it?

    2. Re:Kinesis Advantage Keyboard by Misagon · · Score: 1

      I would say that the Kinesis is in a class above any Microsoft keyboard in terms of ergonomics.

      Not only are the hands slanted, but there is more separation between the hands.
      It has low-force mechanical Cherry MX Brown key switches that are relatively smooth, where as the Microsoft keyboard's keys bind horribly on off-centre key presses. (Cherry MX key switches are all the rage among PC gamers right now... ;) )
      The lack of numeric keypad is actually ergonomically better in that it allows you to keep your mouse closer to your centre.
      The keyboard layout can be fully remapped (without drivers, stored in the keyboard) and it can record macros.

      Drawbacks is that 1) you must touch-type properly using all fingers and that 2) the keyboard is quite high because of its curved key wells.
      #1 isn't really a drawback in the long term though, as learning proper touch typing will make you a better typist overall. It is easier to learn touch-typing on a Kinesis than on a flat keyboard.

      --
      "We mustn't be caught by surprise by our own advancing technology" -- Aldous Huxley
    3. Re:Kinesis Advantage Keyboard by jkonrath · · Score: 1

      It's a Toyota/BMW comparison. The Advantage is a mechanical keyboard, with Cherry Brown switches, while the Microsoft is membrane switches. There's a lot more tactile feel to the switches, and they keys themselves don't wear and fade like the MS one. It's slightly louder, but it's also not as mushy. It's fairly easy to take apart and clean, too.

      The one big thing about the Advantage is that aside from the two key banks being completely split from each other, they are in "wells" that curve inward, and some of the most-used non-alpha keys (space, modifiers, enter, backspace) are on banks under your thumbs. It's a learning curve, and if you don't touch-type, it's a steep one. But it's a huge comfort difference.

      I used to swear by the MS Naturals, and would burn through one a year. I switched to the Kinesis four years ago, and it still looks and feels almost brand new.

    4. Re:Kinesis Advantage Keyboard by clay_buster · · Score: 1

      They last a long time. I finally killed one of the AT connector versions of that thing. Now my oldest is a yellowed PS/2 version that is at least 10 years old.

  42. Logitech MX510? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Is that the mouse with the lightweight OMRON switches that fail after a year or two? I've personally worn out three Logitech mice with those switches.

    Still have an old G7 at work. It's working because I've never gamed with it, so the switches haven't failed. I know the minute I game with it the switches will fail.

    People have been selling replacement switches on eBay for years to fix these things. Hard, daily use, year after year? LOL.

    1. Re:Logitech MX510? by omnichad · · Score: 1

      Don't remind me. I loved my Performance Mouse MX until I hit this problem. Couldn't justify replacing it for the price.

  43. My mac SE/30? by mveloso · · Score: 1

    The thing still turns on and runs. Unfortunately Iost my ADB keyboard and mouse so I can't use it.

    1. Re:My mac SE/30? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If only all the world's remaining ADB peripherals hadn't been lost in the great ADB purge of 2011.

  44. Nokia 6700 Classic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nokia 6700 Classic - i can't make it die (and i try hard years now)

  45. Logitech G5 mouse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This mouse has survived every click-fest I have thrown at it over the past 7+ years. Including Diablo 3, Torchlight 2, countless shooters, StarCraft II, and so on. Plus working full time with it. Not a single issue with the hardware itself, ever, in all that time.

  46. My Monkey Wrench by jittles · · Score: 1

    I've got this giant pipe wrench that's been taking a beating (well... giving one) for decades. I can't tell you how many passwords and pin codes I've cracked with that thing. Best hacking tool I ever bought.

    1. Re:My Monkey Wrench by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

      yeah, but do you have the joe pesci autographed model?

      that may be worth some moolah, someday...

      --

      --
      "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  47. VHF-UHF Ham Radios by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yaesu FT-411 and Kenwood TM-732A. 22 years and counting...

  48. Old Nintendo Products by ausekilis · · Score: 1

    True, the NES had some issues with the 72-pin connector... but my SNES still works just fine after I cleaned the cartridge contacts and cartidges. First time, every time. Same with my N64 and gameboy color. Do a web search for Gameboy in Iraq. You'll turn up a fully-functioning gameboy that survived mortars(bombs?) hitting a base. The thing is mostly black and has some of the plastic melting, but it still plays tetris and is on display in a museum.

    1. Re:Old Nintendo Products by Dega704 · · Score: 1

      Nice how so many of these old consoles work just fine with just a little TLC. Even with the NES you can buy a new 72-pin connector and make it work like new.

    2. Re:Old Nintendo Products by GrumblyStuff · · Score: 1

      Sadly, battery-backed saves don't last. My Pokemon Crystal is nigh unplayable because of it and I remember as a kid having the same issue with Zelda on the NES. N64 and Gamecube controllers can't handle the beatings that the consoles can. My Gamecube has occasional read issues but it's lasted thousands of hours, many a tens of hours play sessions or overnight cheeze-fests to level up RPG characters (or I'd fall asleep with it on while leveling up). But yeah... RIP analog sticks. :(

    3. Re:Old Nintendo Products by jandrese · · Score: 1

      In general, anything with an optical drive is not going to be on the list of most dependable electronics 20 years later. Optical drives are crap.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    4. Re:Old Nintendo Products by WinterSolstice · · Score: 1

      You can replace the batteries - I bought a little wrench off amazon to re-do the batteries in my Gameboy carts - worked great.
      I think you can have it done to them for like $10 if you're not handy with solder.

      --
      An operating system should be like a light switch... simple, effective, easy to use, and designed for everyone.
    5. Re:Old Nintendo Products by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My gameboys, they have survived repeated banging that just killed a DS, are older than I am, I don't think anyone still has the battery hatches anymore. Gamecube got fried by lightning, but we were still playing it when it got zapped.

    6. Re:Old Nintendo Products by BTWR · · Score: 1

      Do a web search for Gameboy in Iraq. You'll turn up a fully-functioning gameboy that survived mortars(bombs?) hitting a base. The thing is mostly black and has some of the plastic melting, but it still plays tetris and is on display in a museum.

      I live in New York City and I can vouch for this. It's in the Nintendo World Store in Rockefeller Center. It's not technically a "museum," but it's in a display case on the 2nd floor with some special/vintage Nintendo products. It is half-melted as ausekills says. They have it auto-playing the original Tetris.

    7. Re:Old Nintendo Products by toddestan · · Score: 1

      You can replace the battery. You'll need a special screwdriver, and in some cases you may need to solder in the replacement. Though I find it amazing that nearly all of my SNES carts still retain their save data. The oldest ones are well over 20 years old!

  49. MacBook (2007 model) by tipo159 · · Score: 1

    My primary work laptop is a 2007 MacBook. When the time came that the company would buy me a replacement, Apple products were no longer on the list of corporate approved laptops, so I have just continued to use the MacBook. It has been pretty much trouble-free. Had to replace the battery and the power adapter and that's it.

    1. Re:MacBook (2007 model) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you have to replace the battery because it swelled up and split? That's what did in my girlfriend's 2007 MacBook. It swelled so much that it bent the trackpad and nearly destroyed the thing.

  50. Test equipment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My Tektronix 465B is probably close to 40 years old and still works. Electronics are fine, but it needed a few mechanical repairs which I made myself.

  51. HP 15C calculator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I got it slightly used in 1984 and use it almost every day. Has only gone through 3-4 sets of batteries.

    1. Re:HP 15C calculator by lazarus · · Score: 2

      Thanks for posting this. I had a 15C which I gave to a friend when I got a 28S. The 28S is still on my desk and still works brilliantly. Both calculators are my favourites. The 28S takes "N" batteries which were for "cameras" when cameras still had film in them. So they are getting a little harder to find. It takes a few years for them to die, but I'm starting to stockpile them anyway.

      I'm guessing the button cells for the 15C are a little easier to find.

      --
      I am not interested in articles about life extension advancements.
    2. Re:HP 15C calculator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HP-45 from 1972 works fine with new NiCd's, as well as HP-67 from 1976. The latter can occasionally read the magnetic cards from the standard application pack.

    3. Re:HP 15C calculator by sh00z · · Score: 1

      Got my 15C as a Freshman in college in 1982, and it's sitting next to me right now. Just used it yesterday.

    4. Re:HP 15C calculator by sh00z · · Score: 1

      >I'm guessing the button cells for the 15C are a little easier to find.

      15C takes the same A76 (LR44) batteries that my Minolta film SLR did. Made life easy.

  52. Canon 1Ds by jythie · · Score: 1

    Those cameras were built like tanks.....

    1. Re:Canon 1Ds by nbritton · · Score: 1

      Cameras have been around for over a hundred years and the technology is relatively simple. You should easily get 20 years of use out of most professional photography equipment. The first digital camera was developed all the way back in 1975 by Kodak.

    2. Re:Canon 1Ds by toddestan · · Score: 1

      I've got a Canon TX that's still in good working order, except that I can't get batteries anymore for the built-in light meter (it requires a mercury cell that's long out of production for obvious reasons). And unlike the 1Ds, the TX was the low-end budget model of day, lacking a 1/1000s shutter speed and the self-timer. Still, not bad for nearly 40 years old.

  53. Sun SPARCstation 10 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a Sun SPARCstation 10 (dual 40 MHz CPUs!) in my garage that has been running 24/7 (more or less) for 20 years now. The original fans still work.... I've had to replace the original boot disk though a couple of times. I wonder if it'll last 30 years...

  54. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  55. Palm IIIx by areusche · · Score: 1

    In a world where most of my smart phones break down after a year, my Palm IIIx will still reliably turn on and run with two fresh double AAs. Amazing device from the early days of handheld computing.

    1. Re:Palm IIIx by mlts · · Score: 1

      I have a Palm VII. It was fiddly, but it worked and works now (although no wireless anymore) as a great password manager that is offline and will always remain offline.

      The device I have that I say has the best design for being timeless is the Palm V. It is one of those things that even 15 years later, it still looks relatively modern (other than the lack of a color screen.) It held up with daily use for years until smartphones caused the device and its charging cradle to wind up on the shelf for good.

    2. Re:Palm IIIx by lord_mike · · Score: 1

      The original Palm devices were definitely tough as nails. My original Palm Pilot Pro was put through the ringer and anded up looking like my dog had chewed it, but it still worked like a charm. Unfortunately, I traded it in for $50 on a Palm Zire 31 color. That unit's digitizer failed within a couple of years. Very disappointing.

    3. Re:Palm IIIx by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've been trying think of what to do with my Palm IIIx. I took a rag to it and wiped it down, it looks basically new, even though I used it every day at work for 4 years. The little plastic lid turned out to be a pretty effective cover, even if it wasn't very sexy. Unlike the magnetic covers for iPad and Android that seems to leave little marks all over the screen. Plus Graffiti was much better for taking quick notes than an on screen keyboard.

      I wonder if it would be worthwhile to build an ultra low power ARM-based PDA or Palmtop. and if anyone would buy something too underpowered to play Angry Birds in 3D. If you were really aggressive about power and sacrificed a lot of performance. I suspect you could get enough of a charge to use it all day with a solar panel integrated in the cover, assuming you remember to leave it on your desk to charge than in your pocket. A cheap calculator can run on a postage stamp solar panel without any need to charge up first.

  56. LED lighting by rasmusbr · · Score: 1

    Cheap noname LED spotlights, cheap noname LED flashlights...

    I'm sure pricey brand name LED lights don't break very often either.

  57. Gen1 TiVo with lifetime subscription! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I got my Philips TiVo Gen1 back in 2001 and it's run every day since.

  58. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  59. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3, LaserJet 4L by mspohr · · Score: 1

    I still use a LaserJet 4L at home for light printing work. This is now over 20 years old. It was used heavily in business for about 5 years then light use at home. I just buy a new cartridge about once a year (recycled ones cost about $15).
    This thing never jams, always feeds properly and the print quality is as crisp and sharp as the day it was new.

    --
    I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
  60. Apple 12.1-inch PowerBook G4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That laptop is like 12 years old and all original parts including hard drive, works perfectly but slow in today's standards. I cant say the same think about my never Mac, the 15inch 2008 Macbook pro: motherboard replaced, CPU and GPU fans replaced, running on third hard drive, DVD burner replaced and the new one has already problems. Looks to me Apple quality got little off after going mainstream....

  61. Fluke and Weller by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They're probably older than most of you.

  62. Bose Wave Radio by unfortunateson · · Score: 1

    Scoff if you must -- I'm not using it for audiophile, but as an employee-project-completion gift, it's made a fantastic $300 alarm clock.

    I've had it for close to 15 years now (it debuted in 1998). It does exactly what I need: Good UI, wake up to radio, tone or CD with slow volume increase, two alarms. Most CD players I've seen don't last this long, and this thing has been a rock.

    --
    Design for Use, not Construction!
    1. Re: Bose Wave Radio by chrism238 · · Score: 1

      Sure, but only 15 years? Wake me at 40.

    2. Re: Bose Wave Radio by nessman · · Score: 1

      I second that. I have the AM/FM only model and it's been working like a charm since 1999 (gift from my then girlfriend).

  63. A pencil? by jbrader · · Score: 1

    A mechanical pencil is a tech product?

    --
    You are so boring that when I see you my feet go to sleep.
    1. Re:A pencil? by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1

      A mechanical pencil is a tech product?

      Can you make one with stone knives and bear skins? But seriously, compared to having to "advance" the lead by grinding down the case of my primitive Ticonderoga, I thought my first mechanical pencil was a technological wonder.

      And after all, we're talking about long-lasting technology. The longer it lasts, the older it gets, right? If someone were still using their great-great-grandpa's John Deere steel(!) plow bought from his blacksmith shop in Grand Detour, I guess that would win.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
    2. Re:A pencil? by surd1618 · · Score: 1

      Maybe, maybe not; I'm a math UG, and I immediately googled it.

  64. The Hayes AT command set by mveloso · · Score: 1

    It's been decades, and that thing is still going strong. When we're all gone, phones will be making calls by mapping whatever you're doing to:

    ATDT your_number

    Note: does ADTP still work? What if you did that on a 4G modem?

    1. Re:The Hayes AT command set by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not just the command set. A lot of the modems were very robust too. US Robotics, Hayes, etc.

    2. Re:The Hayes AT command set by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just gives an error nowadays. :(

  65. I'll wear out before it will by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    my leather condom, that is.

  66. None of them, absolutely none. by nimbius · · Score: 1, Insightful

    If youre trying to find tech products crafted with longevity in mind, you're going to have a bad time. The entire technology industry is built around intentional, and unintentional, Planned obsolescence. Connectors are intentionally standardized then customized slightly to stymy interoperability and in turn drive sales of every other accessory they use. cellphones are made from thermoplastic and glass, and come with a multi billion dollar advertising industry to ensure you buy new ones every year or two. And if that doesnt work, Software is simply bloated up until you're forced to buy a new one. everything from laptops to food processors have replacement parts, but those parts are often at the economic disadvantage of the buyer in that they cost upwards of 50% or more of the original purchase cost. this is to induce you to consume more. Proprietary operating systems like windows, and applications like crysis or autocad will intentionally fail to function if you dont have a machine of a particular newness. The data transfer standards themselves are also wildly flexible in that for example what once was an open USB standard for most handheld electronics has become a confounding vortex of shit called MTP or media transfer protocol with limited support in open operating systems and wildly different/broken implementations across devices that do claim to support it.. Video game consoles are rarely backwards compatible. and arguably the digitization of over the air television was a pointless subsidy from congress to force consumers to buy a new TV so they could turn around and gift companies like AT&T with practically free spectrum. tablets are routinely locked down with UEFI to ensure once its not supported by the vendor anymore, you cant do something insane like install your own OS and continue to use it. No, you'll rent your technology and open your purse when you're told to.

    devices will never be built to last because our society is predicated upon an open market and endless consumption in which we never question the longevity or practicality of the devices we're told to purchase. The best you can do is mitigate your participation in this endless moebius strip by championing open standards and solutions. build your own pc and replace components as necessary. stop buying a phone every two years. Pick up a book at the library instead of renting text on a device you never actually own.

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
    1. Re:None of them, absolutely none. by omnichad · · Score: 1

      I don't think MTP is such a bad idea. It lets Android use ext2 without breaking USB connectivity with Windows. What would you suggest for the masses?

    2. Re:None of them, absolutely none. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Err, the USB Mass Storage that Android before 4 had and used quite happily?

      Not going to upgrade my Galaxy Note to Android 4, simply because of that. I do NOT want to have to install fucking drivers to get files onto/off my phone.

  67. TRS-80 Model 4P by jbrandv · · Score: 1

    It's heavy and slow but the thing won't die. It still runs some home automation X10 stuff from the 80s.

    1. Re:TRS-80 Model 4P by wwphx · · Score: 1

      My Model 100 still works, though it's in a closet at the moment. And my Apple Newton works just fine. I wish my Palm Pilots had fared as well, but I don't trust anything that rides all day in my pocket to survive like that.

      --
      When you sympathize with stupidity, you start thinking like an idiot.
  68. 1975 Casio Pocket-mini calculator by Dega704 · · Score: 1

    A calculator older than me which I inherited. Many calculators have come and gone but this thing has survived much time and abuse. I always liked it's glowing LED numbers, even if it takes two AA batteries to power it.

    1. Re:1975 Casio Pocket-mini calculator by sconeu · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up. All those mid-70's calculators were built to last. Probably because they were so damned expensive at the time.

      I wish I still had my 1976 "Spirit of 76" bicentennial TI 4 function calculator.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
  69. Apple Laserwriter 360 Select by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple Laserwriter 360 Select (1994)

    Still working. It is slow but I figured Id use it till the toner runs out. thinking about getting a faster printer. Hows that for 20 year old computer equipment still in use! MacOSX prints to it though a linux cups server.

  70. Uhh can we count porn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    youporn never dissapoints

  71. Logitech TrackMan Marble Mouse by MAXOMENOS · · Score: 1

    I've had mine 15 years. I had to buy a PS/2 to USB adapter and occasionally clean out built-up dust. Once in a great while I miss not having a mouse wheel. Otherwise it's given me no issues. Added bonus, it's saved me from carpal tunnel.

  72. Keeps cutting by NEDHead · · Score: 1

    Powermatic 66 table saw

  73. Stone axe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I picked this up second-hand, and it's about two million years old -- but still works like new!

  74. Western Electric Telephones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The model 500 rotary dial telephone and later on, the TrimLine phone. Both were unbelievably reliable. I keep an old TL phone in a drawer at home in case my modern POS cordless phones go out.

    1. Re:Western Electric telephones by swamp+boy · · Score: 1

      Those things were awesome. Practically indestructible and they always worked perfectly (except the speed dialing).

  75. Texas Instruments calculator by smooth+wombat · · Score: 1

    TI-36 solar version. Came with the vinyl flip case which still has part of its spine holding on like grim death.

    Bought it just out of high school (back in the day) and recently used it for my stats class (about 2 years ago).

    I still take it with me every time I go grocery shopping to keep track of how much I'm spending.

    --
    We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    1. Re:Texas Instruments calculator by thrich81 · · Score: 1

      I've got my TI-36 Solar sitting on my desk here right now. I use it almost daily. The top cover of the vinyl case ripped off just last year.
      I have my late 70's vintage TI SR-50 working at home. I had to replace the original Ni-Cad batteries but it still works fine with that 10 digit red LED display. It isn't as rugged as the TI-36, though, the slide switches for On-Off and Deg-Rad are feeling soft.

  76. Anything by PC Power and Cooling. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a 500W power supply with rock solid voltage going strong for 12 years now. It's still under warranty for 3 more years. Best $250 I ever spent. The 1000W model I got a few years later still works, too. I haven't tried their stuff since OCZ bought them, though.

  77. Yamaha Clavinova by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I've got a Yamaha Clavinova electric piano that I bought new in the early 80s. Still plays great, though it lacks modern niceties like USB ports and iPad attachments. At one point, I stupidly hooked it up to a cheap power adapter and blew a fuse, but after I managed to find replacements, opening it up and replacing was easy and it's been flawless ever since.

    Pianos are, thankfully, an area where UX designers haven't tried to meddle with the interface for the past 500 or so years, so older versions are still quite usable.

  78. Model-M Keyboards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I'm using an IBM Model-M keyboard that is over twenty years old.

  79. IBM 3720 terminal by n1ywb · · Score: 1

    I can confirm from experience that an IBM 3270 terminal is practically indestructable. Standing on a loading dock I picked one up over my head and threw it as hard as I could down into an empty metal dumpster at ground level. The result? A small crack in the housing.

    --
    -73, de n1ywb
    www.n1ywb.com
    1. Re:IBM 3720 terminal by Misagon · · Score: 1

      I know people who collect vintage computing equipment that would kill you if they had seen you do that. (figuratively, of course)

      --
      "We mustn't be caught by surprise by our own advancing technology" -- Aldous Huxley
    2. Re:IBM 3720 terminal by n1ywb · · Score: 1

      "If you wanted to get a free IBM 3270 terminal then you should have been there 20 years ago when the hospital threw away a dumpster-full." --Captain Hindsight

      --
      -73, de n1ywb
      www.n1ywb.com
  80. Nokia 55x0 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I used my 5590 until I couldn't get batteries for it anymore.

  81. HP Terminals. by jcr · · Score: 1

    The HP 2647 terminals we had in my high school were built like tanks. I'd bet they'd still work today.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  82. iPhone 4 Meets Washing Machine by lazarus · · Score: 1

    My daughter forgot her iPhone 4 in a pocket while doing laundry (commercial-sized front loader in an apartment building). The door locks when you start these. She panicked when she realized (like all teenagers do when they are without their device for 10 seconds) that she didn't have it and that it was probably in the wash.

    No amount of convincing could get that machine to stop or open up, so she sat their crying for the entire wash cycle (I could only imagine what the accelerometer was doing during the spin cycle). When it stopped and unlocked she retrieved the phone and it was fine. Still works today two years later. I suspect the iPhone 4 will go down in history as being a really solid device, although with 10s of millions of them I'm sure there are lots of stories to the contrary.

    --
    I am not interested in articles about life extension advancements.
    1. Re:iPhone 4 Meets Washing Machine by rolfwind · · Score: 1

      I find the earpiece speakers in them go to shit easily. Otherwise okay.

    2. Re:iPhone 4 Meets Washing Machine by GrumblyStuff · · Score: 1

      The sad thing about it is there's now an expectation that technology will or needs to be quickly replaced so it doesn't matter how solid something is built as long as it lasts until the next version is out.

    3. Re:iPhone 4 Meets Washing Machine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't really have to upgrade... see they want you to buy buy buy the shit all the time but really ask your self, do you really need it? Save some cash so you could set your self free...

    4. Re:iPhone 4 Meets Washing Machine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. Here in Seattle, Apple invalidated our warranty over simply using the phone. Their claim is that Seattle is too damp so it invalidates your warranty. My 3G quit less than a month after I bought it. Apple wouldn't replace it due to "use in a humid environment." They got sued for this, and were ordered to pay $53 million for devices that fail so easily. They intentionally made iDevices fail when they were near water, and the courts hammered them for it. I don't like your lie that the phone survived even a second with contact with water. By spouting that nonsense, someone reading it is going to kill their iPhone because they'll use it near water or on a damp day when they wouldn't have otherwise. You are fucking over people with that lie.

    5. Re:iPhone 4 Meets Washing Machine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I could only imagine what the accelerometer was doing during the spin cycle"

      It was sending data back to Apple headquarters, where they said, "looks like we got another one in a washing machine"

    6. Re:iPhone 4 Meets Washing Machine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, I've read some huge lies here, but that one is definitely one of the worst. Simply using an iPhone in a humid environment will kill it. Apple recently lost a lawsuit over their phones quitting after being exposed to a humid environment. The sensors would even trip without needing to be exposed.

    7. Re:iPhone 4 Meets Washing Machine by tsa · · Score: 1

      Talking about washing machines: mine will be twenty years old next year. It's still as good as new. Miele, there is no better one.

      --

      -- Cheers!

    8. Re:iPhone 4 Meets Washing Machine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There'd fucking /better/ not be, given that they cost upwards of £3000...

    9. Re:iPhone 4 Meets Washing Machine by nessman · · Score: 1

      Impossible. My 13 yr old has an iPhone 4 that would break just by looking at it. I've yet to see any iPod, iPhone or iPad that doesn't have a broken screen.

      At some point some water got inside it and now it just stopped working.

  83. Old karosene tractor/farm motor! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A friend of mine has a neighbor who has an old hot bulb tractor/farm engine. Still works like a charm after well over a hundred years of heavy use. They use it to power a saw and hay blower (and some other stuff that I don't have a clue what it is).

  84. My Soundcraftsmen PM-860 amplifier by mark_reh · · Score: 1

    200W/ch of bullet-proof audio. I loaded it with everything from ribbons to electrostatics and it has never faltered. I got it new in the mid 80s and it's still going strong.

    My Squeezebox 3 music player has been working perfectly for the last 8 years, and even the VFD, which I had expected to last 2 years based on experience with VFDs in VCRs, is still perfect.

    1. Re:My Soundcraftsmen PM-860 amplifier by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I still have a working Squeezebox. The original, with hand bent plastic.
      Still in use too (although more as a display for what its playing than using it via remote)

  85. Compaq P1210 by rbrander · · Score: 2

    My Compaq P1210 catwarmer only died a few months ago, after daily use since early 1998. When the cat went to jump on top of the new LCD and simply landed on the desk behind, he was not amused. I put a pillow back there, and now it's his secret hiding place; he leans up against the back of the LCD for his catwarming needs. (This is Canada; as I write, a nasty mix of snow and rain is blustering around outside.)

    1. Re:Compaq P1210 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's some nice pussy you got up there in the frozen north.

  86. Garmin Forerunner 301, Honda Insight 2000 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've had it a decade it's still working ok.. has internal NIMH's not 13 hrs anymore now just 11 hrs per charge.. but works... my Honda Insight... 2000, replaced battery in 2012... hit 150,000 last week, still running fine.

    I have other stuff that still works just other better things have replaced....

  87. Re:test gear that was made in USA in the 50s and 6 by mlts · · Score: 4, Informative

    I would say that my old HP48SX calculator with a card for additional functions still works and is useful. Engineering calculations are engineering calculations, and the tactile feel of the buttons is a lot more accurate than trying to use an emulator on a smartphone.

    Just the small engineering touches showed outstanding build quality. For example, the card had an edge connector, but there was a sliding metal flap that kept the connector on a card shielded until it was inserted into the calculator.

  88. Cowon D2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cowon D2, 7 years and counting. Goes with me on every plane trip and most train rides.

  89. Old computers and certain new components by carlhaagen · · Score: 1

    All of my old home computers I kept are still in 100% working conditions - a few C64s, Amigas, Ataris etc. In terms of more modern computing, my best example would be my home server/router which is a 14-15 years old Abit BF6 motherboard with a low-power passively cooled P3-600/133 and 512MB of RAM. This machine and its original 200W PSU saw 8-10 hours of use 5 days a week during 2000-2004, and from 2004 to this very day - 10 years - it has been running 24/7 as my home server/router, without failure. The only thing that has been replaced in that machine is the original HDD I bought with it, a 12GB Fujitsu drive, that died in 2010, after 10 years of service. They don't make 'em like they used to.

  90. Mod parent up funny by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    I have had my MacBook Air running almost continuously for three years. Almost no hiccups. That's about it!

    I just retired a thinkpad that was over 8 years old and still working perfectly. I retired it only because I needed a better video card for the work I was doing; it became a parts system to help someone keep their own collection of aging thinkpads going.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    1. Re:Mod parent up funny by SJHillman · · Score: 1

      I have a Thinkpad T60 that's still my primary laptop (although not primary computer). I've dropped it, spilled milkshakes on it and have generally given it hell over the last 8 years. Runs better than ever since putting Windows 7 on it.

    2. Re:Mod parent up funny by wagnerrp · · Score: 1

      I have an A22 from early 2001 that still sits on the end of my desk serving as a spare UXGA X-server.

    3. Re:Mod parent up funny by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1
      I have a T23 that I use when travelling - but it has an SSD in it now. Its great because the HD is easily accessible to I can switch between Win7, WinXP (for my embroidery machine) and Ubuntu (for getting work done).

      I also have a T21 which I use as a dumb terminal for configuring servers - cos it has an RS232 port. Currently runing Xubuntu, but was running FreeBSD till I decided I wanted to try Xubuntu on something.

      I also have a T61 (Also Xubuntu) which is used by visitors of all ages. None has needed any significant traiining AFAICR.

      Oldest of all is a 760E - it still works, but lacks USB or any kind of networking, and a new OS means loads of floppies - so it may work, but it is not much actual use. One day I will put the HD in something else to install NetBSD, and then I could use PCMCIA network and USB cards.

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
  91. Bell Western Electric 500 by jlv · · Score: 1

    Unlike newer alternatives, this are still working great.

    Added bonus: you can hammer a nail with bakelite.

  92. Time's Up by magusxxx · · Score: 1

    Until two years ago I had one of those old clocks that had the flip down numbers. 1982-2012.

    --
    Care killed the cat, but satisfaction brought it back.
  93. IBM Model M Keyboard by jrq · · Score: 1

    Indestructible. The ultimate keyboard. Bought one as a spare 12 years ago, just in case. Still sitting in its box. The best!

    --
    My UID is prime!
  94. Early 2004 G4 iBook by carlhaagen · · Score: 1

    Still runs just as good as the day I bought it 10 years ago, incl. the HDD that came with it. The CCFL backlight in the screen has lost a lot of brightness output, though.

    1. Re:Early 2004 G4 iBook by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I bought my daughter an iPad in 2001 when she went to college. It was her only computer for five years, then she got a mac mini. She used the laptop in her graduate classes for about two more years before she upgraded to an Intel-based mac. I have it and I'm running OpenBSD on it. It's not doing much, but it still works after nearly fourteen years.

    2. Re:Early 2004 G4 iBook by BTWR · · Score: 1

      I assume you either meant an iMac (or maybe even an iPaq), because not even Steve Jobs could have purchased an iPad in 2001.

    3. Re:Early 2004 G4 iBook by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Probably an iBook. 2001 would (probably) make it one of "toilet-seat" models. Haven't seen one of those for a very long time. I think people were embarrassed to be seen with them and quickly replaced them with something that wasn't so garish.

  95. Hammarlund SP-600 Super-Pro by jtara · · Score: 1

    While it's long gone, I had a Hammarlund SP-600 SuperPro that had seen 30 years of use before I got it.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H...

  96. Win XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Win XP will endure

    1. Re:Win XP by tsa · · Score: 1

      OSX is as old as XP and still going strong.

      --

      -- Cheers!

  97. Egarland's law by John+Bokma · · Score: 2

    It's called Egarland's law. Funny that you've never heard of it...

    1. Re:Egarland's law by asmkm22 · · Score: 1

      I've never heard of that either. I have heard of Survivorship Bias, however.

    2. Re:Egarland's law by egarland · · Score: 4, Funny

      I think you're confused.

      egarland's law states that only pompous windbags have their names associated with obvious phenomenon that everyone has always known.

      --
      set softtabstop=4 shiftwidth=4 expandtab nocp worlddomination
    3. Re:Egarland's law by John+Bokma · · Score: 1

      I've never heard of that either. I have heard of Survivorship Bias, however.

      wooosh ;-)

    4. Re:Egarland's law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's called Egarland's law. Funny that you've never heard of it...

      Quick! Add it to Wikipedia

  98. old telephones by BattleApple · · Score: 1

    Those old rotary and touch-tone phones from the telephone company in the 70s/80s. I think we had the same one from 1976 to the early 90's, and that thing took a lot of abuse from three kids. It was constantly being yanked off the counter but the handset cord, and the plastic cover would come off, but the thing was a tank. It never stopped working

  99. Hitachi CRT's by l810c · · Score: 1

    I bought 1 on my 21" Hitachi SuperScan Elite's in 1996 and the other 2 in 1997.

    Been using them non stop(day and night) for work and play for 16-17 years.

    1. Re:Hitachi CRT's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My 2004 Fujitsu Siemens TFT died a month ago from a static electricity discharge when I was switching it on :( now if only I hadnt thrown away that Iyama CRT a few years ago as it was only collecting dust.

  100. U.S. Robotics Courier HST modem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... Easily my longest lasting piece of hardware. I purchased it when 2400-9600-14,400bps were the norm - we're talking 1992-93-ish - and it was JUST new enough to handle a daughtercard upgrade to support what became V.90 (i.e., 56K modems). Well, technically it supported 28,800 with that initial daughtercard upgrade but the same daughtercard could be upgraded to support 56K.

    Couriers were beasts and were incredibly reliable. I'd heard MultiTech and some of the early Hayes series up to 14,400 bps were quite sturdy but I was such a huge fan of USR Couriers I never considered looking elsewhere. Yes it was a $700+ modem (if you didn't buy it on the BBS sysop program, anyway) but it really was worth every penny. 99.9% of people bought junk, especially when Rockwell popularized 56K modem chipsets and there were thousands of ultra-cheap Asian modem vendors. Being involved in the early ISP dialup days (1994 onward) I can't tell you the innumerable headaches cheap, crappy modems caused us front-line tech support commandos - but then we probably wouldn't have had jobs if everyone used Couriers.

    I gave that Courier away on Craigslist after a number of fruitless attempts to sell it a couple years ago - who needs modems these days, right? It was collecting dust in the garage and even nostalgia and sentimentality couldn't force me to keep it. I may have shed a tear or two letting it go but time marches on.

    Still - a great piece of hardware that will be fondly remembered by those fortunate enough to own those old monsters.

  101. Voyager 1 & 2 by MetricT · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Roughly 40 years old and still doing science.

    1. Re:Voyager 1 & 2 by jtara · · Score: 1

      Well, yea, except for losing a few letters...

      (V G E R)

    2. Re:Voyager 1 & 2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My Peter Wright 300# English-pattern anvil,
      about 140 years old, highly evolved over hundreds of years.

  102. Re:CRT televisions by omnichad · · Score: 1

    Why does my TV need to boot anyway?

    Most TVs run firmware of some sort. Even CRT. The newer CRT TVs did not have a physical dial for changing channels, they display channel numbers on screen, and they even have a few menu options. Guess what runs that?

    It sounds like you're not buying good LCD TVs.

  103. 3D printer in every home by josmarten · · Score: 1

    In a few years every home will a precision 3D printer , organics, polymers and alloys, etc., that should last and running on Solar, Wind and Biogas , anywhere....

    1. Re:3D printer in every home by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL sure sure, just in time for the space elevator, space-based solar power and the mars colony! Bahahaha! Good one. You're funny.

  104. Audio gear, telescope, calculator, and ... by edremy · · Score: 1
    45 years old: Celestion Dynascope. Tracking drive still mostly works, although I did have to inexpertly replace the cork clutch which explains the "mostly"

    30 years old: HP-11C calculator, Kenwood audio amp, Bose speakers, AKAI tape deck are all still running after 30 years, although they don't get much use, the tape deck especially.

    25 years old: Yamaha PAC-921 guitar. Had to replace a potentiometer but it works perfectly, and with decent maintenance will probably never fail. There are tons of people with older electrics

    And the current champion, which I don't think anyone's mentioned: my Dad's hand me down 60-year-old slide rule. Still works, and I threaten my students with it occasionally

    --
    "Seven Deadly Sins? I thought it was a to-do list!"
  105. Nintendo Gamecube by gman003 · · Score: 1

    Maybe it's not the longest-lasting on the list, but it's definitely a very sturdy product in its category. I have a launch-era model (with the digital a/v out, although I don't have the cables for it), and it's still running flawlessly. It's not even really showing its age - it still looks fine, with the only yellowing being a slight tint to the front plastic. It probably helps that I have a black model.

    Come to think of it, none of my Nintendo hardware has ever failed on me - they've lasted until I've sold them off. Some of the Game Boy games died (battery-backed SRAM - battery only lasts so long), but never a console or even controller.

  106. Alarm clock by dentin · · Score: 1

    I still use to this day the General Electric model F1-8147-5 alarm clock my dad gave me when I was a kid. It posts from somewhere around 1970.

    --
    Alter Aeon Multiclass MUD - http://www.alteraeon.com
  107. Crowbar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My faithful crowbar. Dropped it back at Black Mesa, and found it a whole series later. It takes one hell of beating, and has opened a whole lot of crates and locks, not to mention dispatched a whole lot of enemies.

  108. Sharp EL-500 Scientific Calculator by CQDX · · Score: 1

    Got it as a gift from Dad when I started junior high in the '70s. I used it daily until I got an HP-11c. I lost the HP sometime in grad school but I still have the Sharp and still use it. I always preferred LEDs over LCDs anyways.

  109. Old electronics lab stuff by 50000BTU_barbecue · · Score: 1
    It's not fair to compare commercial lab equipment to consumer-level stuff, but I will anyways. I have a lot of test gear from the 1960s and 70s.

    Tektronix 547 oscilloscope mainframe, early '60s

    Plugins for the above giving me 4 traces, or 1GHz sampling, 10GHz spectrum, sensitive differential input

    P6042 DC-50MHz clip-on current probe

    HP 6284A DC power supply

    HP 5316A 1GHz counter

    HP 3468A 6 digit DMM

    It's important and easy to get the documentation. As it is, most of these things just need maintenance, and the occasional burnt parts are still available. Except for the esoteric stuff like tunnel diodes and the current transformer assembly for the P6042.

    The 547 is going on half a century. This stuff was built like a car, lots of metal, a thick chassis, very large components.

    --
    Mostly random stuff.
    1. Re:Old electronics lab stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When HP got into the computer business they lost their love for electronics and adopted Love Of Money instead.

      Compare that with Rohde&Schwarz, who are still a leader in T&M.

  110. Orange Panasonic Pencil Sharpener by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Got it in high school in the mid 70s, finally failed last year.

  111. Primitive technology by mendax · · Score: 1

    I've had the Swiss army knife of knives for more than 25 years ago. It is, not all that surprisingly, a Swiss Army Knife that my sister bought in Switzerland and gave me for Xmas one year long ago. I still carry it with me everywhere and used it a few days ago when I was replacing some knobs on bathroom drawers at my parents' house.

    --
    It's really quite a simple choice: Life, Death, or Los Angeles.
  112. LaserJet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Still have an HP LaserJet 3 in service since 1988. Still works fine, but very slow compared to modern printers.

  113. Western Electric telephones by arfonrg · · Score: 1

    Pre-divestiture Western Electric telephones (500 series in particular) - http://www.geofffox.com/wp-con...

    --
    Your thin skin doesn't make me a troll
  114. Re:test gear that was made in USA in the 50s and 6 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It might be repairable, but the performance of much of the test gear from back then wasn't as good as modern test equipment, particularly when it comes to RF. There's a few golden oldies (8663 signal generator) that had outstanding performance, but a lot of that gear is pretty poor performing compared to inexpensive stuff that does the same thing today. A good example is spectrum analyzers and RF signal generators in general. Sure you can find an old HP141T, and maybe get it working, as long as the CRT is in good shape, but for around $1000 (or even less), you can get something that hooks up to a USB that will blow the doors off that 141 performance-wise, and, in particular, user convenience wise. Likewise, modern power meters are much better.

  115. Don't forget the 12C Financial and it's forbearers by Invisible+Now · · Score: 1

    Used to be on conference calls to close a deal and could scribble with one hand on a yellow legal pad and work the N, PMT, I, PV, FV buttons with my other thumb. Still emulated on the IPad (and sold by HP)... In it's realm nothing better came along after. Do you miss the good old days?

    --

    "Knowing everything doesn't help..."

  116. Surprised nobody has brought up the MSFT Trackball by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For a company that has been the root of most flame wars, the Trackball Optical is probably the most reliable product I have from them to date. Even now on eBay you will find used ones selling at the same MSRP as when they came out, if not more.

  117. Re:test gear that was made in USA in the 50s and 6 by sconeu · · Score: 1

    HP gear used to be synonymous with "Sherman Tank". Nowadays it's all disposable cheap plastic crap.

    --
    General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
  118. DEC by Larry_Dillon · · Score: 1

    Most things made by Digital Equipment Corp.

    --
    Competition Good, Monopoly Bad.
    1. Re:DEC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Made by, not contracted by (for a while they used Tandy for their IBM/windows compatible PCs)

      But real DEC equipment prior to the commoditizing and use of PC hardware even on other architecture systems? Absolutely.

    2. Re:DEC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As an ex-HP employee/student, it is really sad to see how DEC and HP went down the sewer. Everything replaced by the half-baked, craptastic stuff of the PC world.

      Sometimes I really think we should all be super-cynical bastards and cheat our customers and users to the limit. Nobody wants to pay for nicely engineered, rock-solid machinery (soft or hard). Cheap, cheap, cheap !

  119. Robots by BigSlowTarget · · Score: 1

    I build and sell mobile animatronics. Last year I pulled an 8 track player and a VCR out of an entertainment robot and upgraded it with a DVD and LCD TV. It had been running shows in local classrooms since the early 80s.

  120. Osborne 1 by VortexCortex · · Score: 1

    I still have a working Osborn 1 and use almost every day. That's over three decades of service. My CP/M 2.2 disks are toast, so I've replaced the OS with one of my own design for use in my hobby home automation projects. The 300 Baud modem died so I use its RS-232 (serial) port with an IR LED and resistor across DTR to do IO with my home theatre system. The IEEE-488 (parallel) port is used for multiple sensor IOs and a sanitized COM link to my Linux server network which can route IR messages around the rest of the home.

    It's more of an "antique" retro conversation piece, but I'm a practical guy and find collectables such as this 1st widespread "portable" PC to be far more interesting when in use; Rather than collecting dust and only being the subject of tech war storries others can witness the power of its simplicity and appreciate the workhorse in action. When I press the button on my remote or smart-phone app visitors (esp. kids) heads are turned by the 5 1/4 inch drive access sounds as the proper code translation table is loaded into the 64KB RAM and colored debugging LEDs on its exposed bread boards blink while status messages flicker to life scrolling up the 54x24 character green monochrome display, then lights dim and a projector screen lowers, and various set-top boxes have their inputs configured. Kids will spend hours "watching TV" just changing the channels and active devices while actually paying attention to the old Osborne One doing its duty. I consider it sort of like an 80's version of steam-punk -- My take on "cyber-punk". Sometimes I'll show the older kids how to manually command systems by making and breaking circuits with a paperclip on the breadboard to do IO. The resulting stream of "how"s and "why"s is fully expected; This setup was socially engineered to lead hapless inquisitors away from the mind-numbing TV and out to tinker with the brain boosting electronics and robotics projects in the garage.

    I have some replacement parts from its dead brothers and sisters, but it too will eventually bite the dust eventually and be replaced with other hardware. I really miss parallel ports. Even kids can do IO by hand on the old interface instead of running everything through a more complex serialization protocol; Building a USB interface just to get back bit-mapped parallel IO is just silly. Thus, old beige boxes and custom DOS programs are still my favourite for intro to software / hardware & robotics even more so than single board or embedded systems like Raspberry Pi or Arduino and its clunky expansion ports -- for want of a simple Parallel Interface... I mean, you can use a bit or byte pattern of a parallel interface as an "escape code" to signal a mode switch and with a few transistors you can have as many "expansion cards" to program as you want. When I'm teaching how stuff works, I don't want things like this abstracted away and hidden behind proprietary hardware and software interfaces.

    Remember the Three R's: Reduce, Reuse and Recycle. Reusing old hardware should be attempted before recycling. Experiencing the magic blue smoke escaping from an old main board, ISA / PCI card, etc. is an important part of learning electronics projects. Having to redo their work teaches folks to be more careful even if the parts are otherwise "worthless junk". Making interesting and/or useful things out of a "Trash 80" is seen by youngsters more impressive than using purpose built devices designed to facilitate the project. If they make it past the Cyber-Junkyard Frankenstein stage Only Then do they move up to working on more expensive single board systems and full featured robotics systems, bypassing the Raspberry Pi and Arduino stage altogether (and foisting some of my old junk into other unsuspecting tinkerers' garages).

    The Osborne 1 is great for operating your whole home AV gear. Bugfixing custom hardware and Z80 instructions exercises one's memory and maintains neuro-plasticity -- It can even cause kids to favor educational programming instead of that obnoxious crap on TV nowadays.

  121. Bush DAC90A Valve Radio from 1950 by w-wright · · Score: 1

    This Radio still works and picks up Radio 4 Longwave and Radio 5 Live really well in the UK.

    1. Re:Bush DAC90A Valve Radio from 1950 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you haven't already, please reemptively replace the output stage coupling capacitor. This serves to block high-voltage DC from getting to the grid of the output valve; if it fails (and it doesn't have to fail catastrophically, just become slightly leaky), the output valve and thus the output transformer will be progrssively overrun. The output valve is replaceable; the output transformer is not (save having it rewound at great cost). This is such a common fault, and causes such expensive damage, that said capacitor has been nicknamed "THAT capacitor" on another forum I use (www.vintage-radio.net/forum). It'll likely cost less than £2 to replace it, and it'll ensure your radio's continued operation for years to come. There are plenty of people on that forum who can advise you if you don't feel confident making this component change, btw.

  122. Old Tek oscilloscopes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Saved a Tek 547 boatanchor from the trashheap. The fatass weighs enough that even I struggle to pick it up; It's got more tubes than transistors inside.

    But fuck... built 1963, and the power rails are all both dead-nuts accurate and ripple-free. Still got the same 30MHz of bandwidth. I'd frankly prefer it to most of the newer $1500 Tek DSOs in the lab if I had to measure an unreasonably high voltage for some reason since I'm pretty sure it'd shrug off a lightning strike...

    1. Re:Old Tek oscilloscopes by 50000BTU_barbecue · · Score: 1

      Excuse me, the 547 is a 50MHz mainframe, but perhaps you have a lackluster plugin in there?

      --
      Mostly random stuff.
  123. Re:CRT televisions by hurfy · · Score: 1

    hehe, I looked the other day and my TV is 1997 :) I hear boat anchors last a while also.

  124. Anything made before 1985 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All the consumer electronics we had before that date seemed to be built like tanks that would run for ever. Sometime after that is when everything seemed to be designed to fail after 3 years of normal use.

  125. 1932 Singer Sewing Machine by pelirojatica · · Score: 1

    I have a 1932 Singer sewing machine that runs like a champ. It doesn't do much, just sew in a straight line, but it was super important tech in its day. I also have an older Singer treadle sewing machine, and short of rust or a sledgehammer there is almost nothing to go wrong with it. Those beasts were built to last.

    1. Re:1932 Singer Sewing Machine by PrimeWaveZ · · Score: 1

      My mom has a Singer from the mid 1920s (according to her) that is the most bulletproof piece of hardware I recall ever using.

      About the only thing that has been done to it, as far as I can tell, is that the drive belt and power cord have been replaced due to material decomposition.

    2. Re:1932 Singer Sewing Machine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      These days they sell "Singer" sewing machines for less than 100 euros here. That implies they have hoardes of cheap and diligent slaves somewhere in asia. They have plenty of features.

      Regardless of how long these machines will last, this is simply astonishing. How can you build a complex mechanical machine for something like 30 euros ???

  126. Ahhh..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Motorola Star Tac, Tandy 100SL (with mem upgrade indeed), Okidata dot matrix "tractor" printers,

  127. IBM Selectric Typewriter by Geste · · Score: 1

    TSLSIA

  128. The clear winner- Model M, NOPE! by arfonrg · · Score: 1
    --
    Your thin skin doesn't make me a troll
  129. HP LaserJet III / HP 28C by DaWorm666 · · Score: 1

    HP LaserJet III - Can't seem to kill it. Slow, by today's standards, but still prints like a champ. It's at home or I'd pull up the page stats. I think its over 1,000,000 prints, as it was used at the office for at least 15 years before they retired it (couldn't get a parallel port to run it off of easily) and I brought it home. HP 28C - While not everyone's favorite HP calculator, my 28C was purchased when I was a freshman in college in 1985, and still used daily. As a matter of fact, I think it's only on it's fourth or fifth set of batteries. They just never die.

    1. Re:HP LaserJet III / HP 28C by cusco · · Score: 1

      If your next set of computers don't have parallel ports get an older HP PrintJet printer server and drop it on your network. Finally gave mine away with the HP LJ III in 2010 when my wife decided it took up too much room.

      --
      "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
  130. HP LaserJet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    another vote for LaserJet Printers here
    I have a 1320n.
    With ethernet support, this thing will be in use for a while. I have no need for color prints, and I dont really NEED a scanner/all-in-one.

    Paid $15 on Craigslist about five years ago, the toner lasts me about 2 to 3 years on average (I dont print that much).

  131. Simpson 260 by LookIntoTheFuture · · Score: 2

    Simpson 260 Series 8 Analog VOM. Built like a fricking tank. Simple, beautiful and reliable. Reads when a DMM wont. Will probably outlast the guy that buys it from a garage sale after I'm gone. :)

    --
    Brave Sir Robin ran away. ("No!") Bravely ran away away. ("I didn't!")
  132. Palm Zire, iPod Photo, Stereo Stuff by captainClassLoader · · Score: 1

    The Palm runs a time logger that I've used to track my work hours since 2003. The thing has outlasted at least a couple of Apple notebooks that it synched to. The iPod Photo I bought in October of 2004 still uses it's original battery. And then there's the musical stuff - A set of Adcom audio separates talking to a pair of Magnepans bought in the late '80s. The Maggies were reconditioned in the mid '90s. That set up still sounds great.

    --
    "The plural of anecdote is not data" -- Bruce Schneier
    1. Re:Palm Zire, iPod Photo, Stereo Stuff by Ol+Biscuitbarrel · · Score: 1

      I've been using the same 16GB iPod Nano for 4 years now. There are aspects of the UI I'd change perhaps but it just refuses to quit.

  133. Kitchenaid Stand Mixer by LynnwoodRooster · · Score: 1

    My grandmother first bought it in 1948. Then my mom had it, and I inherited it 12 years ago. Still works great, nothing broken on it, original parts. Yes, the dials are faded and it's got lots of scratches, but still turns out great dough and batter. 66 years and counting!

    --
    Browsing at +1 - no ACs, I ignore their posts. So refreshing!
    1. Re:Kitchenaid Stand Mixer by matfud · · Score: 1

      Not unusual. It is a motor in a cast iron body. They only thing likely to go wrong with it is the power cord degrading and sort of turning to dust. I have no idea what the coils on the motor were insulated with but it seems to have lasted and works well enough. I suppose it is not wiggled around enough to cause it to fail. Wire insulation from that period is very brittle (even 60 years ago it was brittle. but they designed it with that in mind. I wonder how well the insulation lasted the last 60 years)

  134. Older Samsung SyncMaster LCDs by jtara · · Score: 1

    I have 4 Samsung SyncMaster 213T monitors, circa 2000. One finally died. The other 3 are going strong. These are IPS monitors, and for some reason IPS went out of favor for years (cost, I suppose) and were hard to find. And few newer ones have as wide a viewing angle.

  135. Define "Tech" by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

    All depends on what you mean when you say "tech," since tech-nically all tools count as tech-nology; to that end, I have a hand-hewn stone axe head that's probably a few hundred years old at least, and it still works fantastically.

    Presuming you meant electronic tech... For me, it would be a toss-up between the DAK Mark III CB radio my grandpa gave me and my Marshall Valvestate 8080 amplifier. The DAK doesn't get a whole lot of facetime (don't have a decent place to put an antenna), but the Marshall gets a workout almost daily.

    --
    An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
    1. Re:Define "Tech" by CanHasDIY · · Score: 1

      Forgot to mention, I also have a TEAC reel-to-reel (don't recall the model off the top of my head) that's been getting quite a bit of attention the last couple of weeks, but once I get all my tapes ripped to digital, it'll probably go back in the display case.

      --
      An enigma, wrapped in a riddle, shrouded in bacon and cheese
  136. TI-83+ Calculator by hendrips · · Score: 1

    Say what you will about the unreasonable price, but the TI graphing calculators last forever. I got a TI-83+ in 1999 when I was in middle school, and I'm still using it frequently at work 15 years later. It hardly ever even needs the batteries changed.

  137. My mother's Dildo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has been going strong for years and years

  138. HP Lasetjet II printers by erp_consultant · · Score: 1

    Those things are indestructible. The ink cartridges seems to last a really long time as well. Big and bulky buy built to last.

  139. REAL Telephones by Gim+Tom · · Score: 2

    Genuine old land line telephones built by Western Electric for the Bell System. They built them, they owned them, and they NEVER wanted to have to repair them.

    1. Re:REAL Telephones by k6mfw · · Score: 1

      they NEVER wanted to have to repair them.

      why would they? they never break. I still have mine, "Bell System Property. Not For Sale." You can buy them on ebay.

      --
      mfwright@batnet.com
  140. Current tech? by gerardrj · · Score: 1

    My iPhone 4s. 3 years old, never in a case and has been horseback riding innumerable times, hiking, camping, boating not to mentioned tossed in to cup holders on to desks and other abuses but still works fine and only has two minor scratches on the the glass.

    --
    Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
  141. Casio fx-100c calculator by seanellis · · Score: 1

    Good calculator - 10 digits, base-N mode, classic Casio design.

    This was a present from when I was at University 25 years ago, and it lasted all the way to this year. Now, one of the display segments has failed so I replaced it with a FX85 which I hate.

  142. Proliant Servers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've been unfortunate enough to have seen several deployments where Proliant Servers were run over for 10 years.

    E.G. G1, G2 and G3 Servers STILL running.

  143. MicroVAX 2000 by Curlsman · · Score: 2

    Late 80s, upgraded to SCSI and 16 MB @ 200ns, run OpenVMS 7.3.

    Also, my penis, late 50s, works just fine, does everything I want it to.

    1. Re:MicroVAX 2000 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, as long as all you want it to do is urinate and dribble the rest of the day.

    2. Re:MicroVAX 2000 by tengu1sd · · Score: 1

      The key difference is the VAX measure uptime in years.

    3. Re:MicroVAX 2000 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And all those newfangled microsoft boxes suffer persistent premature ejaculation...

  144. Tech devices and appliances by Hamsterdan · · Score: 1

    Tech: 2 C64s (first model), 3 1541 and 1 1541-II. Logitech optical cordless desktop (mouse needs a new battery door, holding with tape). both NES consoles.
    Appliances: My mom's old Panasonic Dimension 4 microwave/convection oven, my 1970 something fridge (still kicking)
    AV: 1974 Marantz 2240, 1980s Alpine AL80 tape deck, old Sony turntable, 1970s Harman Kardon speakers. 2000s RCA 52" HD RPTV, 27" Trinitron CRT.

    As a previous poster wrote, most things made before mid-eighties were built to last, not so for the newer stuff that has to be either replaced or repaired after only a couple years of use.

    --
    I've got better things to do tonight than die.
  145. Re:ipad v1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I should think a bear would find such a meal quite easy to partake.

  146. Every Nintendo consoles by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ever.

  147. DEC VAXstation and MicroVAX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We have one VS3100-30 here that has been in use since 1989, and still runs hard drives in it from the early '90s (204 and 425MB). It runs 24x7, handles batch ops at night, and is used interactively during working hours. Fourth monitor (currently a flat panel NEC that supports sync on green), second power supply, and we replaced one hard drive about 20 years ago. The drives are also DEC. Its continued operational status is not unusual or surprising. DEC made things well back then.

    We're also just on the edge of retiring a ~1992-vintage MicroVAX 3100-30; our last customer running VAX/VMS just completed their 18 month plan (which took 7 years) to migrate to a lesser platform (cough cough microsoft cough) which has already horked them over several times ;). At that point we'll pull our last 10Base-T/10Base-2 hub (also DEC) out of the rack since we won't have any remaining thinwire devices in use.

  148. Microsoft Office 95 by Livius · · Score: 1

    Works perfectly fine without the bloat or broken user interfaces of the newer versions.

    1. Re:Microsoft Office 95 by BTWR · · Score: 1

      I love Clippy. There, I said it.

  149. LEF Football and HP calculators by Arkham · · Score: 1

    I have an LED football game from about 1983 that still works. I have my HP 48 GX RPN calculator from my college years (1992+) that works as well now as it ever did. I'll be using that calculator 30 years from now when I am 70 years old.

    --
    - Vincit qui patitur.
  150. Weller soldering iron by Guyle · · Score: 1

    More of a tool than something technical, but this thing was passed down to me after my father went to the playground in the sky and has to be at least 25 years old. I've never even replaced the tip, just file it down now and then to retin the tip.

    Another great tool (that also passed down to me, and is also similarly about 25 years old) is a Beckman Industrial DMM. I've used it extensively in projects indoor and outdoor and I would put it up against a Fluke for quality and accuracy. I love that two of my staples when it comes to tinkering have been so dependable over the years.

  151. Re:test gear that was made in USA in the 50s and 6 by forty-2 · · Score: 1

    Amen to that!
    My old Tektronix scopes are still frighteningly accurate some 50+ years later. The old manuals went beyond just schematics & troubleshooting procedures; there were very through circuit descriptions and theory of operation narratives & diagrams. I learned much of what I know reading those old manuals and maintaining my gear as a kid. Even later era 7000 series gear (babies at 30 - 40 years old) are still rock solid, well documented, and maintainable (though the digital stuff gets a little dicey with those custom, hard-to-find chips).

    --
    never drink kool-aid from a big vat
  152. Bird 43, Simpson 240/260 by sillivalley · · Score: 2

    As another commenter mentioned, old test equipment -- the design of the Bird 43 wattmeter hasn't changed in over 50 years (and mine is over 30 years old). Similar story with the Simpson 240 series of multimeters (VOMs). I inherited a set of Starrett micrometers that are wonderful, even the ones my son used as C-clamps as he was growing up...

    I also have a stack of old HP and Tektronix test equipment -- stuff that has service manuals and more-or-less replaceable parts (except for things like 'scope front ends, which are custom assemblies made of pure unobtanium).

  153. Heathkit AA-10 Stereo Amplifier by nani+popoki · · Score: 1

    I built this kit in 1965. I'm still using it. It has operated flawlessly since the day I put it into service.

  154. Microsoft hardware, oddly enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a Microsoft serial bus mouse in the bottom of my miscellaneous hardware box that I used for about twelve years on three different computers. It was working fine when I finally put it away. I had to because I couldn't find serial bus drivers for it. I am still using a Microsoft ergonomic keyboard which I got more than fourteen years ago. It is my main keyboard and it gets used daily. It's too bad Microsoft's software isn't as reliable and as durable.

  155. built to last very dependent on application by recharged95 · · Score: 1

    "What's your longest-lasting, hardest-working device?"

    Wacom stylus pen for my wacom tablet.It's stretching what's technical, but it is technical compared to a pencil.

    Then again, then there's my 45yr old frig (was hi tech then).

  156. WRT-54GL by dumfrac · · Score: 1

    Hardest working: WRT-54GL. 7 years of constant effort.

    1. Re:WRT-54GL by CronoCloud · · Score: 1

      I have two WRT-54G's (sadly they're V8's), they've run 24/7 for years. (One is used as a bridge)

  157. Another vote for the G4 Era of Macs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Another vote for the G4 Era of Macs.

    I have one of the QuickSilver PowerMac G4's and its a tank. Its survived having a sprinkler pipe burst one floor above it and rain about 3000 gallons of water out of the ceiling. Another time I dropped in on one of the handles, and it bounced and rolled, and was fine. Thing still works to this day!

  158. Tech that lasts 30 years by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Model t's from the 20's
    Wilde theodolites from the 40's
    WE phones from the 50's
    Nikon stuff from the 60's
    HP calculators from the 70's
    Tek Scopes from the 80's
    Fluke multimeters from the 90's

    There is still plenty of stuff around from the 00's and later, but it's a bit too early for anything to stand out like the above.

  159. Dynaco A-25's by methano · · Score: 1

    My Dynaco A-25 speakers still worked fine when I sold them on Craig's list a few years ago. I would have kept them but I no longer had a receiver to drive them. I asked for $30 each, the same price I paid in 1973. The guy paid that, saying it seemed like the right price and made a good story.

  160. Radio Shack 100 portable computer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I own one that is almost 30 years old, and it is so solid you could use it to pound in nails.

  161. Sun Sparc Workstations by jhswope · · Score: 0

    I used to administer a stack of 20 or so of these that were 15+ years old. Roofed leaked in the server room directly above them. Water ran down the entire stack and pooled on the floor. I opened each machine and there was no water inside of any of the cases. This pissed me off because I was really hoping they would die.

  162. Bought one for $5 the other day by Phil+Urich · · Score: 1

    Obviously a hell of a lot harder to dial, but sounds great (both in terms of call quality, and that brilliant mechanical bell ring).

    --
    I remember sigs. Oh, a simpler time!
  163. Macintosh amp from late 70s. by sizzzzlerz8429 · · Score: 1

    Bought new with my first couple paychecks after graduating from college. Never had to replace anything, tubes included, and it sounds a sweet and warm today as it did 35 years ago. I've upgraded my speakers several times but I'm never giving this up until it explodes.

  164. Plenty by Giant+Electronic+Bra · · Score: 1

    I just disposed of some 90's era monitors that were still working fine. I have a scanner from the 1990s, and a printer from 2003. My keyboard is from 1985. I have some very old mice, a floppy drive that has migrated from homebuild to homebuild for a VERY long time, etc. A lot of stuff doesn't last more than 3-4 years, but your better quality stuff does.

    --
    "Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem." -- Jefferson
  165. South Bend lathe - 1939 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm owner 2 of a 1939 South Bend Workshop C lathe. Perhaps not "technology" in the usual slashdot sense, but it's had one paint job, and it's about ready for a new cross slide screw, as the backlash is up to almost 8 thou in the center. Take care, Stan

  166. Slide rules by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All the ones in my collection work just fine. Even the all-plastic ones. You do have to keep those away from radiators, though.

  167. Dell LCD Monitor by SirAudioMan · · Score: 1

    I have a Dell 2005FPW 20" LCD that I bough in 2004. I believe it was the first series of widescreens from Dell, this one being 16:10 with a res of 1680x1050. I remember when I first used it with Windows XP I had issues with Dell's drivers no supporting the WSXGA+ resolution correctly. It has support for VGA and DVI, plus a composite and s-video inputs too. I have thought about replacing it with a newer LED monitor but the damn thing wont die (knock on wood) and works just like the day I bought it!

    Mark

  168. HP-67 by movdqa · · Score: 1

    Scientific calculator with motorized mag card reader for program and data storage. The card reader/writer no longer reads and writes reliably and the original NiCad batteries died many years ago but I use NiMH batteries in the original battery case and the calculator works. Nice to have an LED display as I like to work in dark conditions. I saw one at the Smithsonian back in the 1990s.

  169. Hewlett-Packard Printer by Zcar · · Score: 1

    Not the current crop, though. I've a Deskjet+ purchased in July 1990 still going strong.

  170. Re:CRT televisions by Culture20 · · Score: 1

    It sounds like you're not buying good LCD TVs.

    To be fair, cheaply made CRT TVs used to last more than a decade.

  171. 2nd Gen iPod Nano by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My 2nd gen iPod Nano still works just fine. I use it for biking. About 10 years after I bought it.

  172. IBM 5150 by jbwolfe · · Score: 1
    Not that it gets much use anymore...

    Still working since the day it was acquired in fall of 1985. This despite having been immersed in water (covered the circuit board but left the floppy drives dry) after a basement flooding a year ago. Its a bit reluctant to boot sometimes but after a power cycle or two, loads up to DOS 3.1 or basic.

    --
    Have you ever noticed that anybody driving slower than you is an idiot, and anyone going faster than you is a maniac?
  173. A "luggable" computer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Imperial Portable PC III Luggable 486. Not a laptop, but an actual desktop computer with a built in screen. I still use it to play some of my older games. There's nothing quite as awesome as playing a game on the hardware it was made for.

  174. Sony HDD 250 by speedlaw · · Score: 1

    Now, I know Sony justifiably gets no love on Slashdot, for good reason, but.... One of the last products built by "old Sony" is a DVR called the HDD 250. They built it for about six months before being patent trolled by TiVo. Near indestructable. Would record 25 hours of HD, tuned all OTA, analog and digital, was/is fully cablecard compatible. I have two, still working. 2006 devices, came out when HDTV was still a new thing..part of the problem was that they were too ahead of the analog shutdown. Until the scumbags at Rovi (nee Macrovision) shut off the listing service, it was the free OTA DVR with a huge WAF that everyone claims to want but that the Cable co makes sure you cant buy

  175. Wrought Iron treadle sewing machine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have my Great great grandmother's Singer wrought iron treadle sewing machine that she bought used in 1906. I have all the attachments, manual, oil can, etc. I use it to sew leather. Still works fine.

  176. Studer PR-99 by hackertourist · · Score: 1

    A long time ago, I used to volunteer for a local radio station. They had a couple of Studer PR-99 open-reel tape recorders. These were used pretty hard, all day long. We used them so much that the recording and playback heads developed visible grooves from all the tape that spooled past them.
    They were incredibly overbuilt. Weighed a ton, they had 3 electric motors that looked like they could start a car. All the circuit boards were slotted in for easy maintenance. They never failed, despite the abuse they went through.

  177. Arches and arrowheads by Subm · · Score: 1

    All those arches in Rome seem to be holding up pretty well after thousands of years.

    I saw some arrowheads in a museum that looked as ready for use as when someone left them there.

  178. Dell Optiplex by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A Dell Optiplex has been running 24/7 for 15 years, as my home server/router/web-server, etc. Powered by Slackware.

  179. MX 510? Really? by O('_')O_Bush · · Score: 2

    I used to go through one about every six months. Their cords were shit, and would break over time.

    I replaced my 8th and last MX510 with a RAZR Imperator about 3 years ago, and haven't looked back since.

    --
    while(1) attack(People.Sandy);
    1. Re:MX 510? Really? by Onuma · · Score: 1

      That's lame. I had an MX500 which lasted many years, have a G5 which still works flawlessly (but isn't hooked up atm) and each of my home PCs has a G500 currently in use. The only Logitech mouse which has ever failed me was the G7 because the battery packs don't hold a steady charge any longer, and I lost the transceiver. Wireless mice don't work without the antenna or batteries :)

      --
      What else can happen when an unstoppable force collides with an immovable object?
    2. Re:MX 510? Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My G7 lasted through a couple years of daily abuse until I smashed it into the ground while soaking it in pepsi (accident rather than rage :)

      I'm not sure which one this mouse is. It's a logitech, costs about $25 or $35. It's the third or fourth one my family has used. I had one, my wife had one, we wore them into the ground, one still works, this one replaced the other. My mom has another logitech that sees a lot of abuse.

      I don't know what the heck you're doing to your mice to kill the cord :)

    3. Re:MX 510? Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've been using a MX 500 for about 10 years. Using it right now. Using a G400 at work, it's the closest affordable copy I could find. Build too cheaply, though.

  180. Bad Capacitors by SIGBUS · · Score: 1

    Come to think of it, that's about the time that bad capacitors started turning up in just about everything electronic. Motherboards and power supplies seemed to be the worst offenders, though, and poorly-made caps are still popping up (sometimes literally) today.

    --
    Oh, no! You have walked into the slavering fangs of a lurking grue!
  181. Now will you damn kids please get off my lawn? by triffid_98 · · Score: 1

    My hardest working, longest lasting tech gear, in no particular order:

    1 IBM Model M (circa 1987)
    1 HP LaserJet 4M+ (circa 1996)
    1 Tektronics 465M (circa 1978)
    1 Weller WTCPT Soldering Station (circa 1975)
    ..
    1 Coby DVD player (circa 10 minutes ago)

    1. Re:Now will you damn kids please get off my lawn? by Shirley+Marquez · · Score: 1

      WTCPT! Now there's a electronics geek's piece of gear! Those things are workhorses, they just keep going. Have to replace the tips from time to time, but you're going to do that with any soldering tool.

  182. Tape decks by astro · · Score: 1

    Despite being relatively complex machines, I have some old cassette player/recorders that are still functioning just as the day they were bought even thirty years ago. The one in my hand right now is a General Electric 3-53008 and it works super despite tons of abuse.

  183. Plumbing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I discovered an old wooden sewer pipe sticking out into a river a while ago and in discussion on Reddit discovered that wooden water pipes are still in use in Washington, DC and presumably other cities... that's impressive, also a bit scary.

    1. Re:Plumbing... by toddestan · · Score: 1

      I've heard someone say that some of the first water mains put in back around 1900 were designed to last 100 years or more. The ones put in before WW2 were designed to last about 75 years. The ones put in during the boom in the 50's and 60's were designed to last 50 years. And the more recent ones starting from 70's are designed to last 30 years. Which means that today we've got something like 80-90 years worth of water mains which are all about at the end of the design lifetime. Something to think about.

  184. Nokia 5110 by Onuma · · Score: 3, Insightful

    My old Nokia candybar phone (c. 2000) is practically indestructible. To this day I can still charge it up and play "nibbles" in all its LCD monochrome glory. Too bad the cell towers don't support its signal anymore...

    --
    What else can happen when an unstoppable force collides with an immovable object?
  185. Re:The clear winner- Model M, NOPE! by sir-gold · · Score: 1

    Unlike that phone, a Model M will work even on the newest computers (with the right adapters). There is no adapter that will make a rotary phone work on a touch-tone-only phone network.

    I'm still using a Model M that was made in 1983, through an AT-to-ps2 adaptor, and then through a ps2-to-usb adaptor.

    Built-to-Last doesn't mean much if you can't still use it for it's original purpose

  186. Bleeding Edge Victorian Consumer Technlogy by Bo'Bob'O · · Score: 1

    My grandmother has a petal operated singer sewing machine from the early 1930s that still works beautifully.

    Sewing machines were a Victorian era household marvel, and really one of the first pieces of modern engineering technology that came into the home. Many were so well built it's not at all uncommon to find them still in great operating condition. You can easily find operating models from the 1800s in any antique store.

  187. swatch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not sure if this qualifies as a tech product, but I have a swatch that has been continuously running since 1986 and still runs great.

  188. 1988 NeXT Cube and Laser printer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Including Full-height 1GB HP mainframe SCSI drive. That drive must weigh eight pounds.

    Still boots, acts as print server, NFS server; works great.

    Thanks, Steve!

  189. is it really force? by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

    "Software is simply bloated up until you're forced to buy a new one."

    I do this weird trick, I don't upgrade the software. If I was happy with the software on my phone in 2011, why wouldn't I still be happy with it in 2014 ?

    it helps that I don't go online much or install a lot of third party software, I understand sometimes security fixes are necessary. (otoh, I was saved from the heartbleed bug on my laptop because it was such an old copy of debian)

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  190. IBM ThinkPad by Sepodati · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I was going to say the IBM Thinkpads, too. Like any computer, they eventually get old and underpowered compared to the new stuff, but they keep chugging. Mine is from 05, I think right after Lenovo bought 'em, but it's still the IBM version. One key is missing, case is cracked and there are a few grey pixels, but it still works (typing this on it now). Made it through deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan, too.

    Is that "long lasting" or is it sad that 9-10 years out of a laptop is considered long?

    1. Re:IBM ThinkPad by istartedi · · Score: 1

      Made it through deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan, too.

      Thank-you for your service. Did you ever dust it out? If so, what was it like opening the thing up? I'm concerned about "losing little screws" and/or "something fell out, now HTF does it go back together?".

      --
      For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    2. Re:IBM ThinkPad by Sepodati · · Score: 1

      I've opened it up for cleaning once or twice. No issues... instructions found online were pretty easy to follow.

    3. Re:IBM ThinkPad by WuphonsReach · · Score: 1

      Is that "long lasting" or is it sad that 9-10 years out of a laptop is considered long?

      I think it's more a function of "your machine is no longer out-of-date 18 months after it shipped". Used to be that laptops had to be replaced every 2-3 years, because the newer models were sporting larger screens, faster CPUs, more RAM, bigger HDs. A 3 year old laptop was *really* slow compared to a brand new model, or it had a sub-par screen, or was just extremely limited in other ways.

      Ever since multi-core CPUs hit the market, combined with the plateau in per-core performance, a 3-5yr old machine is still a very viable machine. Newer systems are maybe only 20-30% faster per core. Gone are the days where CPU performance doubled every 12 months (now only true if you keep adding cores and your workload is easy to run in parallel).

      For instance, I'm still using a Thinkpad T61p from mid-2007. it has 8GB RAM, Win7, pair of SSDs and still performs well enough that I'm not ready to replace it yet. It lives in a docking station, so the screen/keyboard don't see much wear and tear. I made sure to take it in for service (new keyboard / mouse / system board) before the 4yr warranty ran out.

      The only downside is that it doesn't have enough CPU power (2.2GHz Core2 Duo) to meet all of my needs, but I have an octo-core AMD chip on the desktop for those needs. But the Thinkpad is still the machine I use 95% of the time for work.

      --
      Wolde you bothe eate your cake, and have your cake?
    4. Re:IBM ThinkPad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was going to say the IBM Thinkpads, too. Like any computer, they eventually get old and underpowered compared to the new stuff, but they keep chugging. Mine is from 05, I think right after Lenovo bought 'em, but it's still the IBM version. One key is missing, case is cracked and there are a few grey pixels, but it still works (typing this on it now). Made it through deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan, too.

      Is that "long lasting" or is it sad that 9-10 years out of a laptop is considered long?

      Lenovo had a warranty repair rate chart showing a reduction in defects and issues starting some time after they took over the laptop line from IBM. I know they were already class of the industry BEFORE that point....

    5. Re:IBM ThinkPad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There was a guy at burning man that had his art project powered by old ibm thinkpads.

      They were caked with playa dust & muck & had dirty hippies messing with them day & night... & they all still worked great.

    6. Re:IBM ThinkPad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Replying on my IBM Thinkpad T60 with a 140 SSD upgrade, Win 7. My previous Thinkpad T42, Win 7 I used for for ages. Just wanted an SSD for speeeeeeed. Still not sure if I'm going to give up my T42, I like it that much. Thinkpads are indestructible.

    7. Re:IBM ThinkPad by SethBrown · · Score: 1

      O5, huh?
      I got me an X20 whose BIOS says 1999. It has a Pentium III 600MHz with a whopping 192MB RAM. Love the keyboard. I use it as my morning PC when I'm drinking my coffee upstairs looking out at the tropical forest around my home. I like old computers. Also got a Model M keyboard but my wife uses it now. I'll have to steal it back from her someday. She doesn't appreciate it.
      I love my Dell Mini 9's but they're young still, from 2008. I take one on my bike with me. Rock solid. I got three of them, so by the magic of parts replacement, at least one should last a while.

  191. Re:test gear that was made in USA in the 50s and 6 by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 1

    the entry level scopes from hp and tek are now rigol and atten; chinese brands. rigol is ok but its NOT hp or tek!!

    the last 'very repairable' scope from tek was the 2465 series and I'm seeing a rebirth of interest in the old analog scopes. check out all the chatter over at eevblog and you'll see what I mean. a few parts were having problems (20 yrs later) and after you replace some leaking electrolytics (just a few, not all) and replace a battery backed nvram chip (that holds calibration settings!) you are good for another 20-30 yrs. the battery in my Dallas nvram module is 20 yrs old and only supposed to last 10. I backed it up to a file, installed a new version, restored data from file and now I have another 10-20 yrs on that new battery/nvram module.

    I am VERY sure that the rigol scopes won't last even 5 yrs in a heavy use environment. the company won't have spare parts, they are all specialized and it will cost a fortune to mail back to china, if you could even GET it fixed, 5 yrs after model was intro'd.

    the smart money is on buying older used gear that has a huge community of owners and techs and who know how to keep the older gear running. for tek, there's a yahoo group that has some older tek employees monitoring it and offering help for those who are reconditioning their gear. you will NOT find that from the throw-away chinese brands and models.

    smart money - for us hobbiests who can't depreciate gear in a few years time - is to buy older used gear.

    --

    --
    "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  192. Airbus A320 by jbwolfe · · Score: 1

    While it gets regular maintenance that includes depot level refurbishments, they fly an average of 10 hours per day. The oldest I've flown, that is still in operation, was delivered June of 1997. It is rare that they are taken out of service. The oldest of all aircraft I've flown still in operation is a P-3C delivered in 1985- soon to be retired. This model has seen a good deal of press coverage of late for the missions it has flown in search of MH370 in the Indian Ocean.

    --
    Have you ever noticed that anybody driving slower than you is an idiot, and anyone going faster than you is a maniac?
    1. Re:Airbus A320 by rasmusbr · · Score: 2

      Somewhat related: the youngest flying B52:s are now more than half a century old. By the time the last one is taken out of service it will probably be pushing 90.

    2. Re:Airbus A320 by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      Lots of DC-3's still in use.

      Next year the Gooney Bird will turn 80.

  193. USB Hub by chriscozi · · Score: 1

    Does ANYBODY have a powered USB hub that has lasted MORE than 2 years? We have more than 200 on site that fail on a regular basis. Sigh. I keep 10 on the shelf.

  194. TI graphing Calculator by j2.718ff · · Score: 1

    Still works fine... and a quick glance on amazon shows it's still worth what I paid for it more than 10 years ago.

  195. Sadly not my HB48SX by Moof123 · · Score: 1

    The design was flawed, using an elastomer connection to the keyboard, resulting in death either over time, or from modest impacts. I loved that thing otherwise. I ponied up for a later 38GX or some such, and the buttons were crap. I now use app emulators of the 48G on my phone and ipod touch as my calculator. It is not the same, but better than that 38GX POS.

  196. IBM Model M by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    WHAT???

    I can't hear you over that clicking and clacking noise!

    Try talking LOUDER!

    Heh. A true classic, the Model M.

  197. Western Electric by Nethead · · Score: 1

    Well, anything by them but specifically the Model 500 telephone set.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F...

    63 years old and still works just like it came out of the factory. The only maintenance is a bit of cleaning with soapy water and tapping the microphone against something hard every few years to pack the carbon granules.

    Also remarkable is that it will still work on just about any phone system in the world. That's a long lasting communication standard.

    Another great line of products were pre-1990 Motorola two way radios. They were build almost as well as the WE stuff.

    --
    -- I have a private email server in my basement.
  198. HP Test gear by clay_buster · · Score: 1

    HP 16500A mainframe with scope and logic analyzer plugin boards. The thing is over 20 years old. Finding pods, probes and adapter boards can be a bit of a challenge though.

  199. Glock pistols by OcabJ · · Score: 1

    Glocks: Pretty ugly as far as firearms are concerned, but total workhorses. Function in rough conditions and easy to maintain.

    1. Re:Glock pistols by nessman · · Score: 1

      Pffft... I'll take a World War One vintage Colt 1911 over some crap plastic Glock.

  200. Re:The clear winner- Model M, NOPE! by vip223 · · Score: 1

    The DialGizmo is able to convert rotary pulse-signals to touch-tones and there are other converters, too. I've used one for a while on my VOIP line.

  201. I'm using an MX518 right now by YesIAmAScript · · Score: 1

    And my Model M is in a box because my boss doesn't like the noise.

    I have an assortment of HP calculators. The HP-49G was a disaster, but the 48s were amazing and the 50 has been good enough.

    There was a range of really well done clock radios from Sony and others right before people refused to pay good money for clock radios any more. After that clock radios then emphasized cheapness at the expense of quality and durability. It's no wonder shortly thereafter people stopped buying them. Once the devices no longer offered any alternative over using your phone, no price is low enough to make it worth purchasing.

    --
    http://lkml.org/lkml/2005/8/20/95
  202. Re:Don't forget the 12C Financial and it's forbear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    its

  203. Laser printers from the mid-late 90s by phillymjs · · Score: 1

    I had an Apple LaserWriter Select 360 (built around a Canon engine, IIRC) that I bought new in 1994 last me until mid 2011. HP was putting out some damned good printers back then, too, before Carly Fiorina came in and turned HP into peddlers of second-rate shit.

    Honorable mention to the TV in my basement, an RCA F35751MB-- the biggest CRT TV I could find in 1994. I don't yet own a flatscreen, because I'm just letting them get better and cheaper until the RCA finally gives up the ghost.

  204. --old guy with lotsa old stuff. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Amazon Kindle 2.the one with the keyboard. I was the second owner. It's now on it's third. Bought by the first owner two weeks after release

    Ive got some old Netgear powered 10/100 hubs that have been online with their original wall wart for nearly a decade.

    just sold my 10 year old "one whole megapixel!!11!!" digital camera.

    factory stock stereo/tape/cd player in my 99 Tacoma.

    got rid of my 7 year old cordless phone 4 years ago because it futzed with my wifi - still worked, donated to Salvation Army

    11 year old 17 inch monitor recycled two years ago, replaced by LCD, still worked when sent off.

    12 year old portable lcd "chess computer" from Radio Shack. Still kicks my @ss on lowest level, but I can beat it regularly on level 2 and 3...

    Got married over a year ago so a lot of my "collection" went away. It was practically archaeology.

  205. Unicomp by bussdriver · · Score: 1

    Unicomp made those IBM keyboards. still in business still making those keyboards. I have one. still loud but work great.

  206. @Whatisname - Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by nukenerd · · Score: 1

    It's ... "Survivorship Bias". Old stuff seems like it was better built because all the crappy stuff already made it into the dumpster and subsequently forgotten long ago.

    No, while recognising that effect you mention, there is definitely a different culture. When my father and his generation bought stuff they expected it to last a lifetime, indeed to be an heirloom, and it generally did. Thus for example he only ever bought one radio in his life, one tape recorder (THE big thing then). I still have his fully usable Rolleiflex camera and Weston exposure meter (both > 50 years old).

    I once bought a house from an old lady with 1950's kitchen cupboards in it. I refitted the kitchen but kept the cupboards for my toolshed. They are very tatty now, but solid wood with dovetail joints - vastly superior to today's chipboard tat, yet run-of-the-mill for their day. They could last for ever.

    1. Re:@Whatisname - Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3 by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      When my father and his generation bought stuff they expected it to last a lifetime,

      Pretty much spot on. I've got a radio that was my great grandfather's, it was my grandfather's for a few years it's mine now. It's a glorious bit of work, solid maple cabinet, cherry veneer, coated with shellac. Tubes, picks up AM, and pretty sure shortwave. Can't remember off the top of my head what year it was made in but it still works, and they used it for years.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
  207. Emacs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Three decades and counting.

    Thanks, Richard!

  208. Re:test gear that was made in USA in the 50s and 6 by sconeu · · Score: 1

    How is Agilent equipment, quality-wise?

    --
    General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
  209. IBM Model M Keyboard by TheGoodNamesWereGone · · Score: 1

    Built in 1993. Still works perfectly

  210. You forgot .. Windows XP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Stuff that lasts over 10+ years?

    I nominate Windows XP, still kicking strong, been stepped on, thrown around and even water spilled on it... still ticking

  211. HP LaserJet IV. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The damn thing is still printing. Display's gone. and it's getting harder to persuade the usb-to-serial adapter to keep working, but other than that, it's unstoppable. Pity HP isn't the same company as it used to be...

  212. do one thing and do it well by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

    Most of my favorite tools do one thing and do it well.

    My list:

    * Swiss Army Knife (now called the 'Spartan' - no frill bullshit). I've redone entire racks of equipment with only this at my disposal and it's not fallen over where multiple others (such as leatherman and gerber) and have had no problems. I've also done god knows what else with them - I've had a total of 2 in the past 25 years as "always in my pocket", and both still work.
    * IBM Model M - goes without saying. They don't break or die.
    * Compaq iPaq desktop - hey, mine is still kicking and working like a champ on my network. Not a fancy billed item, but I've had mine working continuously as a small home network services system for over a decade now, and it's reasonably power efficient even by modern standards.
    * Brother ML1345 printer - black and white laser. Still kicking.
    * Nintendo Gameboy - the original. Built like a fucking tank. Mine got run over by a Ford F150 and still works: my kids use it.
    * Hitachi hard drives: they're the best out there. I've never had one die and have owned dozens personally.

    --
    ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
  213. Stupid article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've had issues with every item mentioned in the article, including the Swiss army knife. However, my Grundig radio is in its 21st year of regular service. Also, the IBM Wheelwriter 3 typewriter at my office is in its 29th year of service.

    Mice and keyboards...really? All of my keyboards have gotten at least one dead or stuck key after 10 years. Buttons on mice wear down to the point where sure, they work, but the repeated and harder presses only contribute to repetitive-stress injuries.

  214. Realistic / HP / Marantz / Thorens / Model M by markzip · · Score: 2
    • Realistic Radio Alarm Clock - Radio Shack's house brand, bought in 1981. Pounded every day since then.
    • HP Laserjet 6P - Prints and prints. When I ordered my new box I surprised the tech who was building it by insisting sure that he include a parallel port card.
    • IBM Model M - Makes me feel like I am doing "real" work when I type. I think mine is from 1989.
    • Thorens TT - Set it up properly, replace the belt and stylus every now and then, good to go. This has been my daily driver for 20 years. But it had a long life before that.
    • Marantz amp - from the mid-70s, just sits there and sound warm and generous all day, every day. Again, relatively recent to me (15 years), and had a long life before that.
    • The point is, buy the most that you can buy at the time you need it and don't cheap out on things you use every day. (Although the durability of the Realistic brand is a bit of a surprise)
    1. Re:Realistic / HP / Marantz / Thorens / Model M by Guest316 · · Score: 1

      Although the durability of the Realistic brand is a bit of a surprise

      Not necessarily. Realistic was always an outsourced brand with some very good manufacturers making appearances under that name. You just had to know which models to look for, or luck out as seems to be your case.

    2. Re:Realistic / HP / Marantz / Thorens / Model M by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now that you mention it, I have a pair of Realistic 6 inch cube speakers which have taken a terrible veating a record fairs over the years. Still sound OK.

  215. Solid state stereo gear by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The solid state stereo gear, from before the advent of Home Theater, is often very well done. I'm using an early 90s amp to drive speakers of more-or-less the same vintage and the setup smokes current gear available for those dollars.

  216. Klipsch ProMedia 2.1 by glwtta · · Score: 1

    Bought these speakers when they came out in 1999, still in use, doesn't seem like I'll ever need a new set.

    And another vote for Cowon - the X5 was built like a damn tank!

    --
    sic transit gloria mundi
  217. CD players by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Panasonic Shockwave portable CD players. (Yeah, okay, I guess that these days they're about as useful as a Bakelite adding machine. But they'll last just as long!)

  218. iPhone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    iPhone 5 as well as all other iPhones I have had. Incredibly well made.

  219. @ wile_e_wonka - Re:Anything built before 2001 by nukenerd · · Score: 1

    Mod parent up. For example .... how cruddy cars used to be and how much better and more reliable cars are nowadays. Compare a mid-90s Hyundai Excel to Hyundais now, for example.

    I don't think cars follow the general trend. For one thing they have moved (in a gradual process) from being an optional plaything (my father only ever used his for weekend drives) to essentials such as getting to work. Another factor (in the UK anyway) was a strong public reaction against cars rusting; rust resistance went through a low point around 1960-1980 but subsequently improved, and it was rust more than anything else which dictates how long a car lasts in the UK. We do not see an equivalent public reaction in most tech areas however because people want to replace eg phones, PCs and TVs because in recent years the tech has become (or is perceived to become) obsolete before the device physically fails.

    A third factor (in the UK again) is that most cars are now professionally maintained. 30-40 years ago it was typical for owners to maintain their own cars - with variable degrees of aptitude. I have maintained my own cars since the 1970's and have seen no fundamental reason for increased reliability other than reduced reliance on mechanical control in favour of electronic (eg ignition timing) - resulting in a tendency for occasional total failure rather than constant progressive deterioration.

    Despite the hype there has not been any revolutionary change in mainstream car tech in the last 50 years - nothing equivalent to TV changing to digital or the advent of mobile phones.

  220. Long live the HP48SX and HP48GX ! by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

    64-bit CPU with Ultra-Low Power (runs off 3 AAA batteries)

    HP preceeded ARM by years but like everything else they do, don't know how to market it.

    1. Re:Long live the HP48SX and HP48GX ! by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      Not even close. I have a still working HP-35.

      Bought in 1973.

      41 year old gizmo.

      They still pop up on Ebay from time to time.

  221. HP LaserJet 5MP by bdwoolman · · Score: 1

    My HP 5 MP Works normally after two decades service. When I bought it in 1994 the memory upgrade was very expensive so I skipped it. But about two years ago the extra modules (32 MB?) were quite reasonable so I sprung when the big new PDFs choked the printer's memory.. Ha. I bought some rubber roller dressing at an electronics store and that stopped the feed problems that began about two years ago -- just after I upgraded the memory. (Murphy at work.) I thought of getting rid of it, but find that I print less and less these days. And for the very few things I do print it is fine. It supports Post Script, but the native non Post Script LPL driver kicks out no memory problems with big modern PDFs and the new RAM. I also use an M Model keyboard. A space saving version (No separate number keys.) I think keeping working tech out of landfills is a kind of green thing to do. I say kind of because it is power hungry. Take my old Pentium 4. I heat my office with the bitch.

    --
    "No fear. No envy. No meanness." Liam Clancy
  222. Re:LaserJet II and LaserJet 3, LaserJet 4L by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This.

    The whole LaserJet series is astonishingly long-lived, especially when compared to the cost-of-ownership of anything else made today. Toner? What's that?

  223. Sennheiser HD280 Pro headphones. by Dr.+Spork · · Score: 1

    More than a decade ago when I was even poorer than now, I bought these "luxury" headphones, and though I tried to baby them, also took them everywhere. They've been accidentally dropped, sat on, slept on, stepped on, you name it. They have obvious damage, but they still sound as good as ever.

  224. USR Courier V. Everything by maliqua · · Score: 1

    Started life as a 9600 this modem saw everything up to v.90 and kflex from both the client and isp end configurations what a machine.

    That modem was built to last it was built when modems where fairly new, and remained relevant with just a firmware update now and then until modems them selves became all but extinct.

  225. Lamy Safari fountain pen by Mprx · · Score: 1

    I've been using a Lamy Safari fountain pen every day for years, dropped it a few times, and it still works good as new. Most fountain pens are fragile and expensive, designed more for asthetics than functionality. The Lamy Safari is reasonably priced and extremely reliable. The grip section has an unusual design that's very comfortable to hold. Even the nibs are tougher than average and if you manage to destroy one (eg. by dropping onto concrete) they are replacable. There's good reason these pens are highly recommended for beginners by fountain pen user groups. It will easily survive long enough to save money over disposable ballpoints if you buy ink in bulk and use a refillable cartridge.

  226. Timex Ironman Triathlon 200m digital watch by john.r.strohm · · Score: 1

    I just retired a Timex Ironman Triathlon 200m digital watch. It was time for a battery (at least its third, possibly its fourth), when I noticed that the Mode button had failed. (I never use it as anything but a watch these days, having pretty much given up diving.) That watch was easily 15 years old, and had been at least 100' underwater (wreck diving off North Carolina).

    That watch was the cheapest diver's watch you could buy, by a big margin. Timex was very careful NOT to call it a diver's watch, because of product liability concerns, but IN FACT that's what it was and a lot of people used it for diving. (On their 50m and 100m water-resistant models, Timex very carefully said that the water resistance was guaranteed only as long as no buttons were pushed, and they very carefully did NOT say that for the 200m models. That language has since changed.)

  227. Motorola Motrac and Mocom70 mobiles by k6mfw · · Score: 1

    Motracs can be a problem if the final PA tube were to blow but both these mobile radios are incredibly rugged. Unit mounts in trunk, control head under the dash. They are big, heavy, and scary. Cheap to purchase but shipping costs are brutal. However, cannot be used for Part 90 anymore as they are not narrowband. Crystal controlled and not many channels can be awkward. These trunk-mounted units can also be used for armor-plating on vehicles as they can stop a uranium-depleted artillery shell or a TOW missile.

    --
    mfwright@batnet.com
  228. Re:test gear that was made in USA in the 50s and 6 by Desolation+Row · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the memory jog.

    I used to have at least one for my tube work in the 60s, 300V or so but I don't recall the specifics. In a quick run through eBay nothing clicked. But I did see where someone was selling filament supplies w/digital displays ... that's just wrong.

    My entire 'B' bench is 70s gear that just keeps on working (HP 1742A scope, 5302A counter, a brace of Simpson 260s, Fluke 1910A, HP-19 calc, etc, all bought new, most still with the original manuals filed in the same cabinets as the few Photofacts I kept). Even more impressive is that nothing is worth anything because everyone else's gear is also still working fine.

  229. I have 2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That are originals (meaning I got them around the time they were new). They are mechanically in almost perfect condition. The key action is flawless. Their biggest problem? They get dirty from sitting on desks and getting used so much. Big whoop.

    They are built like tanks. Something IBM and the product designers can be truly proud of. Never been surpassed and only occasionally equalled.

  230. Thumbs up on those old LaserJets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The II, 3 and 4 were all excellent.

    We had one printer in HR at a long-ago job. I'm pretty sure it was an LJ 3. One day just out of curiosity, I checked the internal device stats. It had printed over 60,000 pages! No maintenance, no cleaning, no IT callouts, nothing but new paper and new toner cartridges whenever the old ones ran out.

    And, compared to the dot matrix printers they had replaced! Well there was no comparison. Better print quality, better page feed reliability, faster output, less space required (no box of fanfold paper under the desk), literally everything was drastically improved.

  231. Watkins tape echo by Tapewolf · · Score: 1

    I believe these were marketed as 'Guild' or something in the US. Mine came off ebay about a decade ago and appears to be one of the first all-transistor models, cira 1966 or so. I believe it's the oldest piece of equipment that I use regularly - I also have an Akai 210GX which I use occasionally.
    Most of my studio equipment is from the late 1980s or early-mid 1990s, when open-reel technology had reached its peak (microprocessor control, built-in DBX noise reduction etc).

  232. Glad to see brother printer on list by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My wife and I don't have a lot. About a year before I started college, a black and white brother laser printer (7820N) came into our lives. After finals next week, I'll be a senior. I have not changed the ink cartridge since we got it. I've printed at least 1000 pages of text, might be as much as 2000. It works fast, it works perfect. I love this thing.

    Got offered a color printer a week ago, accepted. Did some research... it goes through ink cartridges fast and the ink costs a fortune. Now trying to decide what to do with it because I don't need one that badly. :> Wish I knew how to pull it apart for tinkering.

  233. Cars, on the other hand... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Although tech products now are pretty damn disposable, it is interesting how much better cars have gotten. I have a 15 year old car that has literally had no service (other than oil changes and 1 wheel bearing) performed on it except for a timing belt at 100,000 km and again at 200,000 km and a new battery at the 1-decade mark. It is as fuel efficient as any non-hybrid on the market and has good safety ratings. It's a 2000 honda civic with the 1.6 L engine and a manual transmission.

    I had a pair of Sennheiser ear buds that lasted 8 years which included hours of use cycling, running, etc (sweat is a well known killer of earbuds) and went through a washing machine before my dog ate them. The replacements (Same brand and price point, around $100) lasted less than 6 months before the wire failed where it connects to the jack.

  234. Re:test gear that was made in USA in the 50s and 6 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please learn to spell "hobbyist". Please. I beg you. You don't write lobbiests, do you?

  235. Might as well add by 50000BTU_barbecue · · Score: 1

    my bike. It was a higher end carbon fiber frame Look and I put on Spinergy wheels with the PBO spokes. It's 12 years old now, might as well call it an antique from a performance bike POV. Yet everyone who's biked with me has commented on how good it still looks and it rides great. I know people who bought newer bikes that simply failed after a few weeks. Either the hydraulic brakes failed or the chain jumped and took a chunk off the frame, etc. The only thing I've done is keep it very clean. That really makes a bike last.

    --
    Mostly random stuff.
  236. Apple Laserwriter by manu0601 · · Score: 1

    I have been using an Apple Laserwriter 16/600 for 15 years now. It is obviously the best buy I ever made.

  237. LEDs in general by Tubepunk · · Score: 1

    Not just LED lights, but LEDs in general, one of the most indestructible pieces of modern technology. If you have a device with an LED, chances are one of the last things to fail will be the LED. My LED-backlit computer monitor is still going strong after three years. Contrast that with the back light of my previous non-LED LCD monitor which I had to replace twice or the flickering picture tubes of my earlier CRT monitors.

    I'm even more impressed with the toughness of the LED light bulb I bought last year, which I stupidly dropped twice from a +7ft height. The LEDs were housed inside a frosted plastic cover. When I dropped it the first time, the cover came off, which I just snapped back on. The second time I dropped it, I managed to break the cover. Now I'm running the LEDs naked, which makes the light kind of brighter and harsh only if I stare at the ceiling for a long time.

  238. my epson printer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    my epson lx-810... it's the only hardware that lasted 2 generations (bessides my grandma's dishes)... i still use it because it's fucking cheap to print with it

  239. Omnikey 101 by Ikester8 · · Score: 1

    Without a doubt, my OmniKey 101 keyboard from Northgate. I bought it in 1994 and I'm still using it.

    --
    That's the last time I run code posted in somebody's sig...
  240. HP LaserJet 4P -- 20 years old by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I bought an HP Laserjet 4P almost 20 years ago (20 years in mid-July). It has a bit over 7,000 impressions and it's still churning out pages.... slowly by today's standards.

  241. The Energizer Bunny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It keeps going, and going, and going...

  242. Nikon F Camera by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dropped more times that I can remember, been through a Namibian dust storm, and generally seen a use more than weekly since 1965. I've changed the batteries 4 times in 20 years. And...I've never had to back up my Kodachrome images and the ones I look at from the 1950 still have true colors.

  243. Cast Iron Skillet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have one that's nearly 60 years old.

  244. first gen grey HTC(?) slide by nagromlt · · Score: 1

    I forget exactly what it was... The brand or even model. It was HTC (early) slide qwerty I'm pretty sure. I had gone through a million cell phones. Breaking. Cracking. Drowning. Crushing. But I finally found one that, LITERALLY, lasted through each one of those normally calamitous events. Here's a link to what I think it was... Well can't even find a photo. When all my friends had flip phones or even iFhones... I had my trusty (WTFIW) cell that was damaged, beat up, scratched, all kinds of $h1te. I think I got drunk one night and to prove a point I stuck it in some $h1te... But it worked. FLAWLESSLY! It was grey. It was hardcore. It was awesome. God Damned it was awesome... :/

  245. Intellimouse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yep, that was one of the best mouse. Their new one that is similar is pretty good too though. I basically used the intellimouse until the left mouse button was unusable from too much clicking (turns out, millions of clicks past its rated life is bad for it).

  246. car engine by schlachter · · Score: 1

    my car engine has 90K miles on it and it's never had an issue. just minimal maintenance required. it's got plenty of life left. amazing that something so complex operating in a harsh environment requires virtually no maintenance to run for so long.

    --
    My God can beat up your God. Just kidding...don't take offense. I know there's no God.
  247. Lead Free Solder by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A lot of the failures of modern electronics is because of the lead free solder. Do a google search for tin whiskers if you want more information.

  248. Re:The clear winner- Model M, NOPE! by wagnerrp · · Score: 1

    There is no adapter that will make a rotary phone work on a touch-tone-only phone network.

    Oh, but there is!

    http://www.voip-info.org/wiki/view/Dial+Pulse+to+Touchtone+DTMF+Converters

    Or you could skip DTMF all together and go straight to SIP.

    http://www.realtonetech.com/product/voip-gateways/83-sip-gateway-ata.html

  249. Keyboard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IBM model M keyboard. Made in the late 80's. Still use several. Wouldn't consider anything else.

  250. IBM model M keyboard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IBM model M keyboard - been using it for 20+ years. Typed this on it.

  251. Carver Ampilifier & Dahlquist speakers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My Carver amplifier and Dahlquist speakers are on all day, every day, for the last 30 years. Best buy I ever made. I'm listening to them right now.

    They're being driven by a Turtlebeach Audiotron, which is at least 10 years old. It also runs all day every day. Oh, and a slightly newer (20 year old) Carver preamp.

  252. focus 2001 keyboard by sjames · · Score: 1

    I bought my Focus 2001 keyboard some time in the early '90s because it was cheaper than the IBM but still had clicky keys and a solid feel. I'm using it right now with an AT->ps2 adapter plugged in to a ps2->USB adapter.

  253. Sharp Pocket PC 1401 by truckwash · · Score: 1

    I use it for almost 30 years

  254. Sanyo Toasty Oven by evilsofa · · Score: 1

    A long time ago (30 years ago? 40? I'm not sure) Sanyo made a toaster that does not break by design: the Sanyo Toasty Oven. My parents have one and I remember using it as a child. They still have it, and it still works, 30 or 40 years later. I plan to ask them to leave it to me in their will. There's a Sanyo Toasty Oven SK-7S on amazon which looks a bit different from the original that my parents have, but it's out of stock, and some Sanyo Toasty Plus ovens on some Asian shopping sites, but all of them are out of stock too.

  255. IBM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thinkpad
    IBM Model M Keyboard

  256. pjammer alarm clock by msim · · Score: 1

    My wife was given a PJammer alarm clock in the mid 80's and it's still going strong today. It was in storage for a couple of years but we dug it out five years ago and it's been beside our bed ever since.

    http://media-cache-ak0.pinimg....

    --

    Life is like a box of chocolates, you never know when your gonna get food poisoning.
  257. Car, anyone ? by vikingpower · · Score: 2

    I have a 1990 Saab 9000, with all the original parts. It is close to hitting the 400,000 kilometer mark. The "onboard computer", as it is grandly called ( basically a piece of electronics computing instantaneous and average fuel consumption, as well as capable of predicting ETA based on a rolling speed average ) still works perferctly. Just like the Bosch cassette player. And the engine.

    --
    Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
    1. Re:Car, anyone ? by gzuckier · · Score: 1

      I have a 1990 Saab 9000, with all the original parts. It is close to hitting the 400,000 kilometer mark. The "onboard computer", as it is grandly called ( basically a piece of electronics computing instantaneous and average fuel consumption, as well as capable of predicting ETA based on a rolling speed average ) still works perferctly. Just like the Bosch cassette player. And the engine.

      that's impressive. I was just wondering the other day what happened to all the old Saabs. Since the company folded, they seem to have vanished. And it's not as if the owners weren't devoted to them

      --
      Star Trek transporters are just 3d printers.
    2. Re:Car, anyone ? by vikingpower · · Score: 1

      I don't know about the US, but here in Europe there are quite lively user and enthusiast communities around the older models. Especially the old Saab 900, the one with the "beak" spoiler on the back, became iconic and still stands, as an image, for everything Saab had to offer. It is loved not for a small part by women, BTW. There is an informal market for spare parts, paint jobs, engine tuning etc. etc., especially in Britain. I recently saw a black 9000 Aero, in perfect state and with around 100,000 kms on the tachometer, being sold by a dealership for around € 8000. Saab is very much alive :-)

      I fell in love with 9000 a long time ago, as it has such rocket-on-wheels qualities which are amazing for a large, heavy sedan. When you hit the gas pedal on a highway ramp you are literally pushed back into the deep leather seats. It is not without a reason that the Swedish police had them as patrol cars for a long time. The thing is a beast of a car - a very, very reliable beast.

      --
      Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
  258. Scythe Ninja Rev1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One of the best passive air coolers ever made, ran 6-7 years on my old rig and nearly 3 on my 2600k@4.4ghz with adaptor modification.

    Passive..

  259. IBM Model M, IBM Thinkpad X30, HP Laserjet 2200 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Model M from 1986 in daily use same for X30 Thinkpad from 2003 or 2004 I think (gateway, firewall, http server, irc screens). Lasejet gets used probably less than once a month but still useful to have sometimes. In its previous life it has accumulated 150k pages printed so in my use it's probably going to last for decades.

  260. Hydropower plant turbines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When we originally started building large hydropower plants in Norway in the beginning of the 1900s, the turbines were built to last 100 years. However, the manufacturers realized, after some decades, that this would keep them out of business in the long run; despite large leaps in efficiency, no-one wanted to replace their turbines before they completed their intended lifespan. Nowadays the turbines are rated for 50 years instead.

  261. Lots of good stuff by ponos · · Score: 1

    Let me see:
    - Half-height 3.5" 200MB IDE hard disk: bought used in 1993, came from a server. Worked until at least 2002-3. Might still work.
    - Non-name mechanical keyboard (not the original IBM!) from the 90s that still works after a lot of abuse. Still has a great touch..
    - CD player: Marantz CD 52 MkII: still works after 20 years, contrary to ALL CD/DVD-RW drives that I have bought for my PC since then and fail after 1-2yrs.
    - HP Deskjet 500C. One of the first consumer inkjet printers. Built like a tank. Probably still works.
    - Logitech G3: great mouse, used it until something heavy fell on it and broke the button.

    As a general note, anything "server/workstation" grade that I bought has generally lasted a lot.

    Now the negative surprises:
    - Any cheap CD/DVD-RW (with the exception of Plextor units). These fail all the time.
    - Exploding capacitors in the Athlon XP M/B
    - Exploding capacitors in a cheap 250W AT (not ATX) PSU. I now only buy high-end PSUs, usually Seasonic.
    - NVidia 8800GS passively cooled. Failed in a few months.
    - Razer Deathadder: weird failures after 1 yr of light use.

    I generally get few failures, mostly thanks to great PSUs that have very low ripple and noise. I think this greatly prolongs the life of electrical components by reducing capacitor fatigue. In fact, most of my old hardware is now in the hands of family/friends, that still use it.

  262. Samsung Microwave Oven by erikmartino477 · · Score: 1

    I have a Samsung microwave oven from 1990 that is still going strong. It was used heavily at my dorm for several years. The only repair was a replacement of the light bulb.

  263. Anything made by Belkin by Custard+Horse · · Score: 2

    ...were built to last but more as objet d'art when the 'functioning' element stops working after, well, 10 minutes or so.

  264. Atari joystick by LongearedBat · · Score: 1

    The Atari joysticks that came with my Atari 2600 outlasted all other joysticks of its age.

    My neighbour and I "upgraded" to others that kept breaking. For example the TAC-2 was advertised as unbreakable such that if you break it, you get to replace it free of charge (imagine that guarantee today!) so we replaced our broken TAC-2's 2-3 times each.

    Nothing beat the original Atari Joysticks.

    Also, Microsoft peripherals such as keyboards and mice are typically very good. If only their software was as good...

  265. My tech stuff that fails to break by zmooc · · Score: 1

    Sony Clie (1999)
    Pentax K-5 (2011)
    Megallan GPS (2000)
    Samsung BW laserprinter (2003)
    Subaru Outback (1995)
    Yamaha Clavinova (1988)

    Apart from the Pentax DSLR I have not encountered similarly sturdy stuff recently... built to last mostly appears to be a thing from the past:|

    --
    0x or or snor perron?!
  266. Braun Micron 5410 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I inherited that shaver from by grandpa 14 years ago and I still use it at least 5 times per week.
    I once had to open it to fix a faulty voltage selection switch. Before that repair I thought it had a bad battery but the huge coils in this thing fill the whole case.

    My parents once had a Miele tumbler and washing machine. The washing machine's program selector (the mechanical brain of that washing machine) failed after about 25 years and the machine was replaced but the tumbler worked until they moved to a flat having a new (Miele) tumbler in the basement 7 years later.

  267. Axe by flyingfsck · · Score: 1

    This is the original axe of my great grandfather. The handle was changed 3 times, the blade once and it is still the best hacking tool ever.

    --
    Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
  268. Cubo alarm clock from 1973 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cubo... a rounded cube about 3" on a side, 7-segment red LEDs. Mostek clock chip. It "broke" sometime in the 80s but I later discovered it was just a bad power cord... spliced it... works like a champ. Over the years, LEDs have dimmed some but still readable. Orange in color... my own personal "Clockwork Orange."

  269. My alarm clock by mstrohbehn · · Score: 1

    I have an LED digital alarm clock I bought in 1977 that still works, and even looks pretty much the same as then. I've used other clocks a total of maybe 1 year, scattered, but always come back to this one. Of course, that's tech that hasn't needed to change, as getting up for work is something that, unfortunately, is still necessary!

  270. Sharp PC 1403H Pocket Computer, HTC Mobile Devices by Qbertino · · Score: 1

    Sharp PC 1403H from '91. I'd bet money that my 1986 Sharp PC 1402 (same device with less memory) still would be working too if I hadn't sold it.
    Batteries are from the 90ies too - haven't replaced them since. Still work. Still have microcassettes with my own software on them, such as a Shadowrun (1st Ed.) Character Builder. Would print out the stats on the cash register strip printer. Still have that too, still works. :-)

    My Mac Mini from 2006 still is going strong, aswell as my HTC Desire HD Smartphone and my HTC Flyer tablet, both of which have been in hard everyday use since 3 and 2 years ago respectively. Both have been dropped hard multiple times, the Flyer is nicked and dented around the edges, the pounch looks like it's been through a war and I've wasted 3 hardcases on my HTC Desire HD and replaced the battery and protective foil once, because it was so banged up already. I expect both to last another few years with everyday use. It's a shame replacing the HTC Flyer battery isn't done as easyly as with the phone.

    I consider the HTC Desire HD and the HTC Flyer the best smartphone and tablet enclosures ever (solid aluminium), better even than Apples current cases - although the iPad Air enclosure does look cool. Shame they don't build them in that quality anymore. They are from a time when everyone was rushing into the mobile market and trying to make a name for themselves. Although the HTC One line still has pretty goog enclosures.

    Interesting tidbit: The HTC Flyers enclosure is top notch and very sturdy which makes it notably heavier than your usual 7" plastic tablet. That's actually a little downside.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
  271. Re:test gear that was made in USA in the 50s and 6 by mirix · · Score: 1

    I have a lot of older Tek, HP, and Fluke stuff. It's built quite well... old Tek scopes are a work of art inside.

    However, 50s is a bit early. Most of the pre 65 or so equipment is still primarily tube, and needs regular maintenance for obvious reasons. Also a lot of stuff from before then used paper dielectric capacitors, which all inevitably fail with age. Not that 50's electrolytics are much better, either. Still well built, but has quirks.

    Test equipment newer than say, 1985, made by those marques certainly has a brick-shithouse feel to it. I guess it's from before they figured out 'value engineering'. Even new HP^WAgilent^Wwhatever they call it now is still built really well, but they charge for it too...

    --
    Sent from my PDP-11
  272. Commodore 64 by beaverdownunder · · Score: 1

    also Apple ][, Spectrum, Acorn Electron, Vic 20, ZX81, Atari 800XL / 130XE, Amiga, Atari ST, Tandy 1000...

  273. Unix by dave.leigh7335 · · Score: 1

    I know you asked about products, but I'm going to stretch it a little for a software product. Unix. 41 years and counting. Like grandad's axe, many of the parts have been replaced, but the essence remains. Still my OS of choice. For hardware, I've got a Radio Shack EC4075 Programmer's Hex & Time calculator/clock that's been in continuous use since around 1980 (I still use it... the batteries last for years), and a Casio CT-6000 synth that's been in continuous use since the mid '80s.

  274. Fluke is indeed no fluke! by Terje+Mathisen · · Score: 1

    My Fluke multimeter which I got from my new boss the day I started my first job outside university back in 1984 (i.e. 30 years ago) is still working just as well as on the first day.

    I have to replace the 9V battery every 5 (3-10?) years, but otherwise this little gem has survived everything, including several accidental drops, some from more than 2m height.

    Really good stuff.

    The portable Fluke digital oscilloscope (Scopemeterl 123) which I got 10+ years later is also working well, the only problem here is that it uses an old-style NiCd rechargeable battery which I've had to replace once. Fluke seems to be selling it still, under the 123/S name. :-)

    Terje

    --
    "almost all programming can be viewed as an exercise in caching"
  275. my condom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I bought it when I moved from mom's cellar to my own in 1981. It still is there because I never had occasion to use it, being a geek and ol'. Unless the bag was empty all along I am pretty sure that if one of those hypothetical creatures called women passed by I could have had a use for it! So it is still old gear and it works...

  276. Film cameras by PuddleBoy · · Score: 1

    I have owned a few (formerly-high-end) film cameras and they were built like tanks.

    My Nikon F4 is 25 years old (?), has lots of scuffs and dings, but just keeps on working accurately and consistently. They were built for hard, daily professional use. I seem to recall that it was recommended that you get them CLA'd (Clean, Lubricate, Adjust) every 150,000 frames. They are complex cameras, with lots of adjustments and accessories. (Have you ever seen a cut-away of the insides of a high-end film camera? Amazing how they fit so much stuff in there.) You can pick these up for a few hundred dollars. (An interesting side-note: the F4 will take Nikon lenses made from 1960 to the present. Talk about backward-compatibility!)

    Look at the way the bodies of the old 500-series Hasselblads were made. Take a solid ingot of aluminum alloy and mill out all the metal you *don't* need for the body. No seams, no rivets, no screws. Very rigid. (Of course, if you smack it so hard that it deforms, toss the body - it can't be repaired. But that takes a serious fall.)

  277. Micronta multimeter M-1 by alfredo · · Score: 1

    I've had it since 1963 and it works as good as day one.

    --
    photosMy Photostream
  278. CD playing Alarm clock by Ralph+Spoilsport · · Score: 1

    model AJ3935 by Philips/Magnavox. Wife and I bought it in 1995. Almost 20 years later it still plays CDs when we want to wake up. We have a habit of rarely changing the CDs. For the past 10 years we've been waking up to Apollo by Brian Eno. Before that it was the Carmelite Nun of Lucon's hammer dulcimer record, and before that it was Music for Airports.
    Best alarm clock EVER.
    HW

    --
    Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
  279. HP11C Calculators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    HP-11C calculator, hands-down winner for sure...... 30 years only and still working, and only on its 4th set of batteries!

  280. Rio Cali MP3 player by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anybody remember the little round rio mp3 players? I've had this thing for ages & it just wont die.

    To give you an idea how old it is... it has 32mb onboard storage.

    Odd thing is... my brother & i both got the same model for xmas all those years ago... & his broke on the first day.

  281. One Microsoft product by danknight48 · · Score: 1

    Xbox 360 controller:
    - over 8 years old
    - sustained puppy chewing on the cable

    Still works a treat!

    I'am not a fan of MS, but i'll give them due credit on the xbox 360 controller, its solid.

  282. Funny story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was going through youtube looking at commercials for my car when it was new (20 years ago)... and one of them was all about how many subarus from 20 years ago were still on the road then... and how their new cars will still be on the road in 20 years.

    Truth in advertising!

    1. Re:Funny story by toddestan · · Score: 1

      Guess it depends on what part of the world you're in. In America, in the early 70's Subaru was still experimenting with importing micro-cars such as the Subaru 360, something that didn't work out particularly well for Subaru. For that matter, I don't remember them lasting very long on American roads.

  283. Moto Droid Maxx by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Got my Moto Droid Maxx on August 27, **2013**, and it's still chugging along like a champ. The touchscreen hasn't even started to bug out yet, even after I hazardously subjected the poor fellow to erratic voltage input from a train's power outlet.

    The Kevlar backing is strong enough to successfully resist attempts to scratch it with your fingernail. The thing's built like a brick!!

    Oh, and one time I dropped it on my desk from a height of about THREE INCHES -- an incredible height that will cause 99% of similar devices to shatter into a million pieces -- and it landed solidly on my desk without so much as a scrape. It made a loud thud; scared me half to death because I was worried I'd have to trade it in for a refurb at the Verizon store (and maybe lose all my data); and then........ nothing. NOTHING. It just sat there happily, like, "Ouch. Did you accidentally drop me? That's OK. I'm built to last, baby. Three inches is child's play. Just don't try six, okay? And let's hope there isn't a 'next time'."

    This phone is so solid, that at this point I'm convinced it'll last me at least another 6 months! Other smartphone manufacturers should be ashamed at their build quality problems.

  284. My desktop computer by Godwin+O'Hitler · · Score: 1

    No name brand I assembled myself. Been running since 1995.
    Just changed a disk drive here, mainboard there, updated the monitor a bit, added a li'l bit of RAM, fitted an optical disk drive when they came out, modernized the case and some other stuff—but it's still the same computer. I've never bought a new one!

    --
    No, your children are not the special ones. Nor are your pets.
  285. Original HP Test Gear by IndieVoter · · Score: 0

    Most HP test equipment from the 60s and 70s. I still use an HP analog volt/ohm meter (HP427), a waveform generator, and a frequency counter to repair audio and old radios. Probably paid $20-40 each at a swap. Once tuned up, they last forever. They were way over built and priced for the cost-no-limit aerospace market at the time.

  286. A few things have gone on and on... by Shirley+Marquez · · Score: 1

    Lots of mine have already mentioned. The Laserjet II and III were tanks and the 4 and 5 weren't far behind. The Atari 800 was a beast that goes on forever.

    Another one for me is a Sony receiver that I've had since 1984. It's part of the secondary system in the electronics workshop now. It now drives a pair of Minimus 7 speakers, another durable product. The Boston Acoustics A40s that were originally connected to it later became the surround speakers in a system with a pair of A70s in the front, but all four of those had to have the foam surrounds replaced so they don't count as being uber-durable.

    I also have a Teac cassette deck from the 80s and a Pioneer CLD-D701 from 1992. (I later found a CLD-D502 for $10 at a flea market so I'd have a backup but the 701 is still going strong.) And the big RCA CRT TV bought at the same time but that doesn't see any use any more except for playing old Atari games; putting those on a flat screen doesn't feel right.

  287. Dell Latitude C610 Laptop by donak · · Score: 1

    Years ago I bought a Dell Latitude C610 laptop from the government department I worked for, on Dell's website it's service tag shows a shipping date of 5/7/2002.
    The software licensing for the Government here in Australia is such that I could only buy the hardware, the hard-drive was wiped.
    So, I have installed various Linux versions on it over the years since I got my hands on it ... all of which ran fine.
    It has a "Designed for Windows XP" sticker near the keyboard, but the "licence sticker" underneath says "Windows 2000 Professional"!
    It has a Pentium III chip, originally 256MB RAM which I upgraded to 512MB ... and a whole 16MB of Video RAM.
    And that wiped hard-drive? 10GB. Needless to say, I'm in two minds whether or not to invest in an upgrade to 40GB, just to return it to usefulness ... or to show off my "still working fossil".

    --
    Don't blame me, it's usually 2 in the morning when I post ...
  288. Designed To Fail by bswarm · · Score: 1

    "Designed To Fail" That pretty much sums it up. Almost all electronics are designed to last for whatever the warranty lasts. It's no longer "you get what you pay for" well, mostly anyway. Some things even have an electronic "fuse" that renders it unusable, some inkjet cartridges for example that still have plenty of ink but is disabled because of the BS fuse/timer built into it. Other cost cutting shortcuts, crappy resistors, capacitors, IC's, etc. which barely last past the warranty. When I build or repair something electronic, I go overboard with better parts to make it last longer. Even hardware and software, designed to be inoperative if you try to update some other part of the system, one reason why I switched to Linux. They just don't build stuff like they used to.

  289. My tractor by Ulric · · Score: 1

    My 1954 Volvo T24 tractor. And since it is still possible to get new spare parts for it, I expect it to run for quite a few more years.

  290. KLH Model Twenty-One FM radio. by ormondotvos · · Score: 1

    Listening to it right now. May last forever. Computer grade capacitors, air tuning. 1965.
    http://www.antiqueradio.org/KL...

  291. Racal RA-17L by knarf · · Score: 1

    All you young whippersnappers with your model-M keyboards (of which I happen to sport some as well) can bow to the supreme longevity of the Racal RA-17L here on the farm which still hums/hisses/squeaks/whines/bleeps/blurps happily along after 60 years. Still using the original valves (that is tubes for you 'merricuns) as well. Valves? Yes, valves. Next to the cockroaches and model-M keyboards these boat anchors will rule the earth after the apocalypse. Not that there'll be much to listen to by then, maybe a pulsar clicking somewhere or a funny noise made by a solar flare?

    --
    --frank[at]unternet.org
  292. calculator got me through grad school! by a11ikat · · Score: 1

    Digical Mark-V calculator. Made in Japan; purchased ca. 1975. Operating instructions pasted on back. Still works.

  293. I'll second that by Deekin_Scalesinger · · Score: 1

    with a late '08 MBP - has lasted much longer than I expected it to. Just tossed 8 GB of RAM into it and I expect at least two more years of life out of it.

    --
    "As the intrepid kobold companion continues his journey, he begins to wonder... if priests raises dead, why anybody die?
  294. Long lasting devices by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Original Tablet Computer. HP TC1000. Still works great including the stylus. The ultimate in cool in its time.

    Images
    https://www.google.com/search?q=hp+tc1000+specs&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ei=ydJSU5WqF8SzyAT61oGICg&ved=0CAcQ_AUoAg&biw=1024&bih=661

    Original C/Net Review
    http://www.cnet.com/products/hp-compaq-tablet-pc-tc1000/

    HP Specs
    http://h20565.www2.hp.com/portal/site/hpsc/template.PAGE/public/kb/docDisplay?javax.portlet.begCacheTok=com.vignette.cachetoken&javax.portlet.endCacheTok=com.vignette.cachetoken&javax.portlet.prp_ba847bafb2a2d782fcbb0710b053ce01=wsrp-navigationalState%3DdocId%253Demr_na-c00351000-1%257CdocLocale%253D%257CcalledBy%253D&javax.portlet.tpst=ba847bafb2a2d782fcbb0710b053ce01&ac.admitted=1397936693312.876444892.492883150

  295. HP48G RPN Calculator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am not using it often, though.

    Bought it while being a student at HP and BA Stuttgart. The days when HP was the proud maker of PA RISC machines, MPE and HP-UX. Test and Measurement leader; chemical analysis, medical products group. In the heart of American electronics almost...

    Bill and Dave were still alive; MBA mupperts not yet being able to do much damage. The writing was on the wall, though. Needless to say they kicked me out, as I felt the need to be an engineer, not a sales whore.

  296. Western Electric telephones circa 1955 by jim.shilliday2271 · · Score: 1

    Ma Bell owned them, we just rented them -- they were built to last forever. Occasionally in a movie somone would commit murder by picking up the handset and whacking someone else over the head. Try that with your iPhone.....

  297. Cessna 150 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My 1969 Cessna 150 still flys like new after more than 6000 engine hours (three overhauls). It's an amazing tech toy.

    John Battle

  298. The HP3000 by tmjva · · Score: 1

    Programs compiled in 1972 still work on this venerable machine last sold in 2006, end of support in 2010.

    --
    Tracy Johnson
    Old fashioned text games hosted below:
    http://empire.openmpe.com/
    BT
  299. Harbor Freight by nessman · · Score: 1

    $6.00USD - http://www.harborfreight.com/7...

    Sometimes they have them on sale for 2-3 bucks.

  300. Stuff that still works by nessman · · Score: 1

    * 1964 Mercury 650 outboard engine (65 HP / 4 cyl / 2-cycle) - starts up every time and runs like a champ
    * Nortel Meridian phone systems - I maintain these for a living, and see a good number of 15-20+ year old systems that are still up and running with 100% uptime... digital phones that are 20+ years old still in service and of course, the 500 rotary and 2500 touchtone analog phones that are still in service too. You'll never see that kind of reliability with the newer PBX's and VoIP systems.
    * Bose Wave Radio - 15 years and still works as well as the day I got it

  301. Sony trinitrons by gzuckier · · Score: 1

    Made the mistake of vowing never to buy a flatscreen to replace any of my Sonys unless they die. The last trinitron that gave me trouble was still the rotary channel changer variety. Since they went to digital tuning, they just sit and laugh at me. It's like having a pet parrot. They're going to outlive me.

    --
    Star Trek transporters are just 3d printers.
  302. guitar amps by gzuckier · · Score: 1

    At least, old fender ones anyway. I found an old fender reverb literally buried in a snowbank. There was a hole through the speaker cone and the handle of the power switch was snapped off. Took it apart and marveled that it looked to be mil- spec inside. Replaced the speaker and the switch and it's been perfect.

    --
    Star Trek transporters are just 3d printers.
  303. 19th century subway systems by mannd · · Score: 1

    Such as the Paris Metro, though admittedly there have been a few upgrades over the years.

    --
    Sig expected Real Soon Now.
  304. HP-11C Calculator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Been using on a "daily" basis for about 30 years. Works like a charm.

  305. HP 15C Calculator by bgettel · · Score: 1

    30 years of daily use.

  306. Companies take note! by Webb21 · · Score: 0

    These posts should serve was a warning to profit-minded corporations everywhere about what NOT to do! Tech built to last 30 years as opposed to just 3? Are you kidding me? Think of all the lost revenue!

    --
    "A good compromise leaves everyone mad." -Calvin
  307. my HP Programmer's Calculator by Douglas+Goodall · · Score: 1

    Given to me in 1983 by Gary Kildall, this calculator continues to function beautifully although HP no longer sells these. It has perverse rolish and support for binary, octal, decimal, and hex.

    1. Re:my HP Programmer's Calculator by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HP-16C. I really wanted one but they sure command high prices on the used market these days.

  308. Cat got my tongue by Krigl · · Score: 1

    Mauser G98, AK-47, Dakota, M-14, TI calculators, Willys Jeep, B-52, CZ 75, Lee-Enfield, Bren. Sadly, I don't own any of them.

    --
    Troll 2.0 Fear my asocial networking!
  309. NOT NINTENDO DSi! But maybe AO laptops by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nintendo DS fails miserably from the shoulder buttons, and there seems to be another bug in the turning on system. Bad idea, at the time I would never consider falling to the floor a common risk. But it should not matter considering cartridges are now as scarced and so badly reproduced by the 3DS repoertoire that Nintendo DSi was just a few years long fad despite being the best handheld gaming machine with lots of more possibilities than their programmers realized (why was it not turned into an early videophone, eh?). As for AO laptops now they are next to impossible to find, but mine are still working as well as Win 7 allowed them to run at purchase time. I expect them to keep going on for years (hopefully...) despite the breaking corners and the lopsiding framework. THIS IS A VERY BAD ISSUE! We are treating unique-in-HISTORY superhuman advances as our next trash weight!!!! So as I say, once RING COPUTERS SHOW UP, the next show will be... DISSAPPEARING ELECTRONICS! Applaude the Mage...

  310. HP Laser / HP scanner by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LaserJet 4M+. Sometimes it makes sense to spend $2000 for a model that is built to last. Bought this model in the 1990s, 150Kpage/month duty cycle, have used it constantly ever since. Needed one $300 repair about ten years ago, produces outstanding print quality (you don't need 1200dpi for text and graphics -- period), super-reliable under Win7, built-in Ethernet port.

    HP ScanJet iicx: See comments above. Bought it early-to-mid 90s for about $2K. Low resolution by today's standards, but that's one reason why its 8-bit SCSI interface still works. And, yes, I have a reliable SCSI interface and driver for my desktop. I keep waiting for it to die, so that I can replace it with some piece-of-shit disposable $150 unit, but it just refuses. And although it won't produce clear scans of microtext on a $100 bill, for 99% of my scanning tasks -- books, paper documents, etc. -- it's as effective and probably more reliable than most of what you'd find on the shelf in a Big Box.

  311. Anything made in USA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anything made in USA, it's simple as that.

    I have an IBM proprinter from 1982, still working.

    My Bose Acoustimass 2+1 speakers from 1998, from when Bose still had a manufacturing plant in Massachusetts, sound as good as day one

    And my favorite piece of tech : my Acme supreme Juicerator 6001, built like a tank. As old as my IBM printer

  312. HP by echen1024 · · Score: 1

    Test equipment from basically any time period was built with top notch components and to last. Have a 6114A Precision Power Supply from 1978 that's still accurate to the last digit.

  313. PDP-11 by Squidlips · · Score: 1

    They never die. VLSI, baby

  314. Casio DW-200 Multi-Alarm Marlin wristwatch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bought new around 1983, in continuous use, worn daily until 2007 when a battery change damaged the seal and it leaked. After finally finding a new seal, rehabbed in 2010 and back in constant daily usage. It has had 4 battery changes in that time, and had the bands changed at least three times but just keeps running and keeping good time.

  315. Voightlander Vitessa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just picked one up and even though it was stored badly and the chrome is pitted and has green goopy rust on it, it still functions perfectly.

  316. Sony Dream Machine by dfsmith · · Score: 1

    I'm in your camp. Although 99% of my Dream Machine works fine, it stopped keeping time shortly after the warranty ran out. Not just keeping bad time, but actively resisting me trying to set it correctly! I'm guessing the RTC chip is broken somewhere, but that 1% brokenness has reduced its usefulness to being an iPhone-charging-picture frame. Blah.

  317. Mechanical tech products by Camembert · · Score: 1

    Not sure if these were implied in the original question: Nikon F2, the electronical F3, and any Leica rangefinder camera and the Rolleiflex medium format camera.
    They may need a very occasional lubrication but that's it. I hav ebene using a 1950s Rolleiflex very often (though now I mainly shoot digital). It is still capabable of outstanding results.
    Also a number of mechanical watches can be enjoyed for decades. Rolex of course. But at the lower end of the price spectrum automatic Seikos will also last a long time, or Omegas from before they were a "serious" brand will also last for decades.

  318. DELL by DarthVain · · Score: 1

    I know, I know.

    However I bought a DELL Dimension 4200 (P3 800) back in 2000. The thing was built like a tank, was about as heavy and could likely stop a bullet. Open it up, and it had over designed all over it with ducts and support struts etc... Worked perfectly until I decided to finally toss it last year, not because it was broken, but because it was just taking up space. The thing never blinked. I suspect this was produced just before DELL apparently went straight to hell.

    The only thing that was wrong with it, was that it originally came with Windows ME installed which was unfortunate. However once that had been replaced it was a fantastic workhorse.

  319. Chery G80-1000 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Found this old keyboard in an abandoned office I shouldn't have been in. The thing was covered grime, some of the keys were so brown you couldn't read the letters. Cleaned up lovely. Double-shot molded keys, mechanical switches; it was clearly built to last and it has done. Can estimate it was built in the late 80's, considering it says 'Made in West Germany' on the back. Not a single problem with it at all since I've been using it.

  320. Late 90s era Gateway 2000 servers by Vrtigo1 · · Score: 1

    Back in 1997-1998 I interned for the high school I was attending over the summer as part of a tech project. We had a couple Gateway 2000 tower servers donated to us and we used to joke that if there was ever a hurricane we'd use them to build a barricade and crawl under them. They were full tower cases maybe 2.5' tall and they were quite solid. Cases today you can bend the metal easily just by pressing on it, the metal in those cases would've taken a hammer to bend. Maybe that's why they probably weighed about 100 lbs each.

    Unfortunately, this is probably one of those things that was overbuilt for no good reason. I don't imagine many servers would have to put up with the level of abuse that would've been necessary to hurt those things.

  321. Sturgeon's Law by grunthos · · Score: 1

    There are probably multiple variations of it, but a common one is Sturgeon's Law

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    --

    My son's 5th grade teacher actually assigned them "write a limerick about a planet". I'm not kidding.
  322. A different type of tech by colinjl · · Score: 1

    Land Rover. Not the poncy SUV-type things recently produced, though. Around 70% of all the Land Rovers ever built are reportedly still in use. Ugly, maybe. Agricultural, I guess. Maintainable - you bet (I had no trouble getting new parts for a 1973 model - and I could upgrade the brakes by just bolting on the ones from a heavier model). Speed - it doesn't matter if the mph (or km/h) is low if the route you can take is more direct and therefore shorter. Rust - extensive use of alloy (right from 1948) renders it largely resistant to the dreaded tinworm. Comfort - not if you're tall or wide, and pretty basic even if you're not. Safety - the other car is your crumple zone. (besides, you can't go fast enough to get into _real_ trouble. Capable - without doubt. An unmodified model from the 60s can still go places modern trucks with all the gadgets can't. Stories of 'barn finds' - cars that have sat in a field or shed for decades - are often found to start first time with a bit of fuel in the tank and a fresh battery.

    1. Re:A different type of tech by colinjl · · Score: 1

      I forgot to mention - environmentally friendly. Not only is the lifecycle impact low (because they last so long), but they have introduced so many to the wonders of nature. And of course they have been putting oil back into the ground for the last 66 years. ;-)

  323. Samsung U30 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    U30 MP3 player. Got it in 2006, still works great. Rugged little critter.

  324. Samsung YP-U3 MP3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Posed U30 above somewhere, that was a mistake... its YP-U3. Working great since 2006, still use it in the gym, smaller than a clunky phone.

  325. Safety Deposit Box by grub · · Score: 1


    Some banks, like my own (TD Canada Trust), offer one for free if you keep a minimum balance in an account. That is where all our original documents go.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:Safety Deposit Box by grub · · Score: 1

      WTF? I was replying to a story about physical data backups...

      --
      Trolling is a art,
  326. XM Radio receiver by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My Samsung Helix XM Radio has been dropped numerous times and gotten rained on more than once (it lives in my Jeep and I'm not always real good about putting the top up). I've had it since 2006 or earlier and it still works fine. It needs a new battery, but it's always plugged into the dash anyway.
    It doesn't do any of the stuff the newer ones do, but it gets the channels I like.