Legacy

Legacy DUBAI

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.

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Nano station M2

Featuring a compact indoor/outdoor design and an interface, it is so intuitive even the most technically challenged can instantly become experts. But

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Nano station M5

NanoStation 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

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Nano station Loco m5

NanoStation Loco M5. LocoM5. Indoor/Outdoor airMAX® CPE Featuring a panel antenna and dual-polarity performance, the NanoStation®

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Nano station Loco m2

The 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

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Power Beam PBE-M5-400

Ubiquiti's InnerFeed technology integrates the radio into the feedhorn of an antenna, so there is no need for a cable. This improves performance becau

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Rocket M2

The Rocket is a rugged, hi-power, very linear 2x2 MIMO radio with enhanced receiver performance. It features incredible range performance (50+km) and

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Rocket M5

The Rocket is a rugged, hi-power, very linear 2x2 MIMO radio with enhanced receiver performance. It features incredible range performance (50+km) and

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Lite Beam LBE-M5-23

The Ubiquiti LBE-M5-23 is the latest evolution of a lightweight and compact, outdoor wireless broadband CPE (Customer Premises Equipment) from Ubiquit

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Legacy Features

  • Hardware 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