A legacy network is the generic name assigned to any old network, which is rarely used today and not part of the TCP/IP protocol suite. Legacy networks are mostly proprietary to individual vendors. With the advent of TCP/IP as a common networking platform in the mid-1970s , most legacy networks are no longer used.
Featuring a compact indoor/outdoor design and an interface, it is so intuitive even the most technically challenged can instantly become experts. But
read moreNanoStation M5 Features: Great Performance: 150+ Mbps real outdoor throughput and up to 15km+ range. Typical range is 2-4 miles from a LOS tower runni
read moreNanoStation Loco M5. LocoM5. Indoor/Outdoor airMAX® CPE Featuring a panel antenna and dual-polarity performance, the NanoStation®
read moreThe NanoStation Loco M2 has a good range thanks to its 2x2 MIMO technology with gain of up to 8dBI. It is also an outdoor device, giving it more freed
read moreUbiquiti's InnerFeed technology integrates the radio into the feedhorn of an antenna, so there is no need for a cable. This improves performance becau
read moreThe Ubiquiti LBE-M5-23 is the latest evolution of a lightweight and compact, outdoor wireless broadband CPE (Customer Premises Equipment) from Ubiquit
read moreHardware in power plants that's so old, the only functioning replacement parts are in the Smithsonian Museum, and the only qualified techs that can repair it are all retired
A still-in-use voicemail system that uses both software and hardware from 1993
Software that keeps score in bowling alleys that runs on Zilog Z80 or Intel 486 machines
A manufacturing machine controlled by decades-old computer running MS-DOS
Financial software running on an outdated Apple IIGS machine because "it still works"
Electronic microscopes powered by Windows 95 computers
Software that requires you to plug a dongle into a parallel port for copy protection purposes, so you're forced to use an ancient system
Sales terminals running on Intel 286 computers because the software is incompatible with anything newer
US Department of Defense computers used to operate nuclear weapons still running on computers from the 1970s at a cost of billions of dollars each year to taxpayers