Apple //c from 1984 (with the original receipt!) The composite video output means I can plug it right into my 50" tv without any special hardware and everything looks great.
I removed the disk drive cable from the motherboard and plugged a floppy EMU in, and now my kids play Lemonade Stand, Dig Dug, Oregon Trail, Carmen San Diego, and dozens of other classic games.
https://www.bigmessowires.com/floppy-emu/
This is only a video quality thing, but you might consider getting an upscaler to get better quality video out of your composite output. I use this one for composite sources: https://www.retrotink.com/product-page/retrotink-2x
The TV by itself might do it just fine! They often have good analog to digital converters built in as shown by Technology Connections: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZC5Zr3NC2PY
I just got a Floppy EMU for my Macintosh SE, and it’s working great! Have been playing many memorable games from my childhood with the next generation of computer users.
The composite video output on the back of a computer at a time when many televisions didn't have composite inputs was pretty advanced. At the time, we had to use a converter (I believe to UHF) that screwed on to two terminals on the back of our tv set.
The fact that, 36 years later, I can plug the //c straight into the composite input on a modern LCD tv and have everything work just fine is impressive to me.
A 5-digit Bates Numbering Machine that I use to stamp all my notebook pages like a mad person! The machine was, from all I could gather, made in the early 20th century, near when plastic was invented and replaced shellac. Each notebook page now has its own unique serial number that I shall forever be able to refer back to for posterity, or if I ever need to present evidence in court from said notebook pages.
Thank you for introducing me to the concept of a numbering machine, I have now ordered one so that I can replicate your behavior since I seem to go through a journal a month or so.
Here I was, manually writing a page number for each and every journal, and then doing it once again for the table of contents :D no wonder I never wanted to write a fresh session after doing all that, my hand was ready to fall off.
* My HP LaserJet 1200 will turn 21 in a few months. Might have another 30 years in it.
* My NES is 33 years old this month. I've replaced the 72-pin connector, but that's it. Everything on it could be replaced, so it'll last as long as I want.
* I've a Panasonic flip clock from the very early 1980s. Still works great after carefully refurbishing it. Radio quality is still quite good.
* My father's trains I think he bought in West Germany in the late 1960s. The locomotive is still on its original motor, and may still be when I pass in 50 years.
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I'm sure my father's old HP calculators are still working. He bought them in the 70s, but sold them to collectors in tight times in the mid 2000s.
I'm impressed with even the new HP printers given the substantial engineering that's gone into reducing cost. It seems both low cost and longevity are achievable with the printers-and-ink business model (which incentivizes both of those for the manufacturer).
My dad collected LGB trains and gave a lot of them to my youngest son. My kid is only 5 years old but understands the value and scarcity and takes really good care of them. They're his most prized possessions. I told him that he can give them to his son or grandson someday.
In also have a LaserJet 1200. On a recent video call, people were surprised to see the relic in my office. I made the joke that it's old enough to vote and then go out drinking after.
They tend to go 400,000 pages before needing a new fuser, and at least 200,000 pages before new rollers.
It's 600dpi and networkable. It supports JetDirect, PCL5 and PCL6. I don't see a "need" to replace them (for home use) in my lifetime.
I just keep it on a switched surge protector because it does draw around 5W of phantom power I think, so it's only on (and on the wireless network) when it needs to be.
My 2nd gen Zune got stolen in 2011 :( I loved that thing. Of course by that point I was using my iPhone for a lot of stuff, but it was just such a lovely piece of hardware I'd probably still be using it occasionally if I had it.
I loved my Zune HD, it had one of the best interfaces for dealing with podcasts that was available at the time. Tons of capacity, great on device playlist and queue management too. I love having access to tons of music via Spotify, but I also miss the days of having room for just 5-10 albums, and having to really curate my music collection. I got embarrassingly familiar with Green Day as an 8th grader with only a 512MB Sandisk to work with. And though the Zune had plenty more capacity, that didn't stop me from listening to BTBAM's Colors on repeat as I walked around campus a few years later. Good times.
My 1984 IBM Model M is still a joy to type on. Every key still works fine, and I wouldn't trade it for any keyboard made in the last 20 years even if new ones come in colours other than beige or weigh less than 10 pounds.
I got a stack of Model Ms from a school surplus sale in 1996; spent some time cleaning them up, and never worried about having a keyboard until earlier this year, when the last one finally died. I'm sure I could go through the stack again and refurbish most if not all of them for another 20 years service.
I have an AT to PS/2 adapter. I don't think motherboards will stop having PS/2 ports in the foreseeable future, and arguments can be made that PS/2 is still the superior connector for keyboards in terms of latency, simultaneous key presses, using hardware interrupts instead of software, and general authenticity of using a connector from the 80s to connect an 80s keyboard.
Sansui G-8700DB 160 watt receiver from the late 70s. Not the oldest, but a major favorite. I got it at a thrift store in the early 00s. Absolute unit, probably 25 kilos. The connectors are all on the side because the heat sink takes up the whole rear panel. Every switch, circuit and light bulb works perfectly.
It's hooked up to my computer via a nothing-fancy DAC and out to a pair of tidy Linn bookshelf speakers, probably 80s vintage. If this office over the garage is rockin', don't bother knockin'.
I had a Technics SA-400 from about the same time period, but I sold it on a couple of years ago. Still working great according to the guy I sold it to.
I don't want to be a downer, and that in parent's link sure is a beautiful unit, but have you checked what the always-on electricity consumption is for the device?
I like old gadgets and collect them to have and to use.
- Nikon LS-IV 35mm film scanner.
- 2007 MacBook running OSX 10.4 because 10.4 is the last version to support Classic Environment which I need to use Nikon Scan for mac. Works great but I can't access the internet securely so I don't connect it to a network.
- Gameboy Pocket with Pokemon Red along with the Prima strategy guide.
- Sony Play Station. The first one.
- Xbox. The first one. No controllers though.
- A few cameras made between 1950 and 1990 that I use regularly. All work well. Before smart phones, digital cameras and PCs were the original obsolete the day you bought it items. I've never cared for the churn and prefer film for this reason.
- An adding machine from the 1920s. Probably my oldest gadget at the moment.
> IIRC the Classic Environment was never supported on Intel, even in Tiger on Intel.
Nikon Scan software for MacOS will only work with MacOS that has classic environment support. I don't know all of the specifics but I can tell you that my efforts to run the software on newer versions of the OS (10.6 and up) were met with errors stating the app required classic environment.
> Also, have you tried VueScan?
Yes, I appreciate the work the software developers have done to continue supporting old scanners. I'd rather not pay for closed source software to support my scanner at the moment when I can use the software that was part of the package Nikon originally provided as part of the purchase price of the scanner. I might change my mind if the price was more appealing for the version of VueScan required to unlocked support for dedicated film scanners. I could see myself paying $20-$30 but probably not $100 when I have the option to pay nothing.
For the $100 you do get basically a perpetual license with updates, so it's not really a bad deal if you have an older scanner that it will work with. And it will run on Linux as well.
The oldest camera I have that I still use (there's a few that are 'retired') is my c. 1954 Speed Graphic.
True, probably if I did not have my old macbook handy I would pay the $100. When it dies or becomes unusable I'll pay for VueScan. For now I'm telling myself I'm keeping two pieces of old tech out of the land fill.
The speed graphic is a neat camera. I used to have a busch press camera of a similar vintage but sold it a few years ago. Never used enough to justify keeping it. Plus it was just too heavy for my style.
My oldest camera in regular use is my Leica M2. The serial number dates it to 1958. It was my favorite camera until a Rolleiflex stole my heart. If you haven't tried one yet I really recommend it. With the exception of the film counter resent lever that is too easy to bump on accident the 2.8f is the most well thought out camera I have used. I like to take portraits and people really gravitate to the Rolleiflex. It's a lot of fun.
I had for a while a Mamiya C330, because it was a lot cheaper than a Rollei. And interchangeable lenses! It was a lot of fun, but I ended up trading that and an RB67 for a Hasselblad.
I buy film from Film Photography Project, B&H, Adorama, and FreeStyle Photo. Most of the brick and mortar camera stores that still exist sell some film. For development I do black and white at home and send color out to thedarkroom.com because I don't shoot enough color to make the chemistry cost effective. I print black and white in my bathroom darkroom.
I'm still able to find 35mm, 120 and 4x5 film easily. I have a 127 camera that is a bit harder to find film for.
Glad to see there are others on HN that are keeping film alive. The great thing about film cameras is they aren't obsolete until the film is impossible to find. Even then there are work arounds and modifications that can be made. A local shop used to sand 120 roles to fit 620 cameras for example. They also cut film to fit Minox cartridges.
Frequently, Amazon. I also buy from a local shop but Amazon usually has better prices as much as it pains me. The film I shoot is usually 400TX or HP5 for B&W. For color I usually shoot Ektar 100 or Porta. I shoot both 35mm and 120 format film.
> and are you developing on your own in a darkroom or sending it out to a lab
Lately I use a local lab.
I also have all of the equipment to develop and print B&W film. My plan is to build complete darkroom in my basement. The pandemic has put my plans on hold for the time being though.
I have a Leica M6 from 1985 and a Hasselblad 500 CM from the 60’s that are both in incredible condition (after a recent CLA). They are wonderful machines, especially the Hasselblad (each piece removable, serviceable, swappable)
meanwhile modded with a ridiculously overpowered microcontroller, different switches and layout to get rid of the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DIN_connector to PS/2 to USB Adaptecmessness
USAF Flight Jacket MA-2/CWU-45 from 1984, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MA-2_bomber_jacket, has actually been flown by me under an Atlas-16 in 1989 somewhere in Austria, and later survived me catapulting about a dozen meters over a Citroen 2CV while entering a roundabout at about 60kph on a bicycle, the lame duck unexpectedly braking, my frontwheel touching its rubbered rear bumper just so slightly...
Landing on the asphalt on my back, sliding, without a scratch, unkaputtbar.
My oldest working devices are all time keeping devices or calculators (or both!), for no particular reason that I can discern.
1. A Westclox Baby Ben luminous dial alarm clock, probably bought in 1980. It still runs fine.
2. A Casio CFX-20 scientific calculator watch bought sometime between 1983 and 1986. One of the side buttons is a bit flaky, and the light doesn't work well, but other than that when I put a battery in it last year it worked.
3. A BHB chess clock, probably bought in 1982 or 1983. Still works.
BTW, adjusting an old analog clock is a lot easier nowadays than it was back then. Just record a few seconds of it ticking, import that into your favorite audio editor, and measure the time between ticks on the wave form to figure out just how much you need to adjust it.
I did my chess clock once that way, and it was way faster and more precise than the old way. The old way was to sync it with a quartz watch, wait an hour, and see how much it disagrees with the quartz watch. Adjust it, and try again.
You could probably also do this with video if you have a camera with good slow motion, assuming the clock has something obvious that moves discretely, and you have video editing software that will show you high precision frame timing. A lot of common consumer video editing software does not show such timing.
4. A Casio FX-702P pocket computer [1]. Bought sometime around 1982.
5. An HP-15C bought sometime in the early '80s. Also an HP-16C, a couple years later.
These are all things I bought new, except for the alarm block with I think my parents bought for me.
There are phone apps you can use to do that automatically. I think most of them are designed for mechanical watches, but they could probably handle a clock ticking, too, unless the sound profile is weird.
At 240 fps, iPhone slo-mo would need about a minute or three of filming to get a decent measurement of accuracy, so audio is generally more convenient.
sliding this comment in here: I wrote a long comment to something relatively charged in reply to you: it got deleted before my comment was done. Hope you weren't downvoted or something, feel free to email me if you care to see my comment, but also, no hard feelings if not :)
I deleted that comment. The thread was about someone killed by police during service of a no knock warrant, and the reasonableness of people in those circumstances assuming the intruders suddenly violently entering their home are there to harm them and so shooting in self defense.
My comment was essentially looking at it from a game theory point of view, and I was suggesting that the optimum move (shoot or not shoot) probably depends on the number of intruders.
I think it is an interesting question, but decided it was veering a bit too far off the topic, and also could easily be misinterpreted as a "blame the victim" thing aimed at the victims in the particular shooting under discussion, and so deleted it.
It works fantastically and makes awesome sandwiches. It even survived a kitchen fire where my cabinets burned down but the snakmaster came through unscathed.
We don't use it often but I'd say every other month or so bust it out for some tasty grilled cheese sandos with tomato soup.
Bit of a different gadget, but until very recently I used to have my great-grandfather's Lee Enfield Mk III (original model with the magazine cutoff) and Pattern 1907 bayonet from the Great War. Unfortunately I moved countries and it wasn't feasible to take the rifle with me, so I ended up handing it to the police for destruction, still have the bayonet though.
It was decades since it had been shot in anger (at either humans or animals), but I took it out once or twice for a shoot. I also had my grandfather's Winchester model 62 pump action .22 from the 30's and a Chinese SKS from the early 60's. All very robust firearms, although the SKS has a very finicky firing pin that needs to be kept clean.
I finally retired my Enfield No4 MkI last year. It's been used for hunting for 3 generations, but .303 ammo is getting too expensive and hard to come by around here. The rifle really preferred 180gr bullets, and it was pretty rare that any local stores would have any in stock.
It was replaced by a CZ 557 Ranger, which was part of the competition recently to replace the No4 MkI for the Canadian Rangers. It didn't win the competition (Tikka did), but as a result there's a damned fine spirtual Enfield successor available on the civilian market.
• A circa 1973 Zenith clock radio with the red LED numeral display. It's in daily use.
• 1956 Rockwell 9in radial arm saw. Motor has been rewound twice now. I inherited it from my father who bought it new.
• An Argus C3 35mm film camera. Not used in many years but still appears to work. I remember it from my very earliest memories.
• A sterling silver Parker pen from about 1974 or so.
• And a really weird one from about 2001: A complete Sony Lissa component stereo system including the speakers, CD and mini disc recorder/player units that connect to the main receiver via 1394TA (Firewire) rather than audio connections. I believe it is the only one in existence that is factory set up for North America 120V/60hz. I needed it for a special project and Sony was good enough to make it for me.
A 1960 Fisher X-1000 stereo amplifier that pumps out about 50 wpc, high for a tube amplifier. I found it on the street about 10 years ago, restored it, made a new brass faceplate, and it sounds just amazing.
I was thinking that the oldest stuff I have that I use (aside from furniture I inherited from my grandfather which I have no idea how old it is) are musical instruments. I have a ca 1969 Gibson EB-3 bass which is my oldest instrument. Of the stuff I've bought new it'd be my first guitar, a cheap classical guitar I bought for around $100 in 1986. The oldest electronic item is probably the Roland D-110 module I bought used and likely was made in 1990–91 and the oldest electronic item I bought new would be my Roland A90EX keyboard which I bought in 1999. I don't think I have anything musical less than 19 years old.
I think so! I've got an "Aloha" branded mahogany parlour guitar that dates from somewhere around then, it's tricky to narrow down any further than that though. Still sounds fantastic.
Panasonic 12V battery drill from the days when NiMH batteries were a new exciting upgrade! Form factor the same and I could use the new batteries in my old drill. But when that drill started to fail I cut the handle/battery mount off to use in my bike lights (I still have that part... does that count?)
On that note: remember when rechargeable bike lights took 10-12 hours to charge? Using drill batteries with a 1 hour charge was revolutionary, especially for overnight bike races.
My first computer, Commodore VIC-20 still working since 1983. I bought a Mega-Cart from Denial computing years ago and it makes retro computing extremely convenient. Only problem is the paddle input is jumpy. Joystick was lost years ago, but didn't have a problem buying a brand new one as it uses the same pinout as Atari.
This was fun to read. "Gadget" definitely needs definition. Does it mean: has moving parts? Requires electricity? Contains "electronics"? If here it means "surpasses its expected lifetime as an electronic device", https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casio_F-91W is a strong contender for me.
I have a small collection of watches dating from the 70s onwards, all of them are mechanical except for the F-91W which I bought during a moment of nostalgia, and it regularly gets worn.
I admit I feel like a hipster when I've got it on, but I struggle to care. Such a great design.
I have two Ashai Pentax Spotmatic SLR cameras with some Takumar lenses. The light meter used mercury batteries. Replacements are air-zinc so are legal.
I also have a couple of HP 200 LX. Which is the best thing for taking a quick note. Open the lid hit the power button and the db key macro and you are ready to enter the notes.
I also have a Drake TR 7 from the 70s. It works but badly need a refresh. The FT 1000 MP mark V is only 20 years old and is fully functional but not that old.
Also needing repair is my TEAC reel to reel tape dec but it is functional.
Also Sony disk recorder/player. Oh and a Sony hi-8 video recorder. I am in the process of transferring many family videos.
My HP 2100 laser jet doesn’t really qualify here.
There is also an old dead iPod which may get repaired.
[Edit] slide rule with mahogany body and Teflon slide. Perfect condition but does not get much use.
Interesting that 'modern' gadgets with few moving parts and for the most part no maintenance. And how long they'll last sitting tucked away in drawers if nothing fouls. Though maybe one day it'll be hard to actually find AA batteries.
Just before electricity became 'the norm' how complex and intricate things were. Especially with how 'rugged' they were in operation and use.
https://youtu.be/52FK1v6lErQ?t=32
Or how intricate and masterful things needed to be to accomplish 'simple' things.
>The "storage capacity" of the automaton, needed to store seven images within the machine, can be calculated as 299040 points (almost 300 kilobits).
I have a 1914 Victrola phonograph that I occasionally amuse the kids with. What amuses me is that the windup clockwork record player is a century older than my iPhone but arguably a technological ancestor. Also, no DRM, I can play century old audio tracks from any manufacturer with the turn of a crank.
As much as I love tech, I love old stuff more. I'm always fascinated by more tactile items. But everything below still works.
Mac Plus, 1986 - My first computer, I gave it to my parents years ago. It still boots, and my mother still uses it to play Hoyle's Book of Games.
Der Spieler, 1969 - It's an East German pinball machine, and completely mechanical. You can still service the light bulbs.
Parker Vacumatic Fountain Pen, 1931 - It's an awful fountain pen compared to pretty much any modern fountain pen. But it works the same as 90 years ago, bleeds the same. The nib is in epic condition.
Seeburg M100B, 1950 - My grandfather bought this jukebox to play music in his shop. I always wanted one, and he gave it to me. It still works, still plays 45s. My kids use it to play Michael Jackson.
My wire tracing kit consists of a tone generator I don't know the brand of because the lettering is worn off. It's black, the size of two decks of cards stacked, a slide switch for off/tone (two types of waveform)/continuity, clip leads or RJ-11, held together with electrical tape, and the battery lasts forever in it. I've sometimes forgotten to turn it off for days and still get about 5-7 years between changes.
On the other end, although I also have a newer inductive probe, I keep around a Radio Shack mini amplifier (#277-1008) with clip leads plugged in for input. It can be used as a tracer or monitor, has a headphone jack for noisy places, and packs a lot of gain in a small package.
I have a Zeiss 6x9cm film camera from 1936 that works wonder still.
For tech gizmos, I have a HP 16C (the programmer's one) from 1864 that I still use most days! (I bought a second one about 15 years ago, as I grew terrified it would break down)
Motorola alpha num pager (FLEX? not sure on the date) for work
A Canon A-1 35mm camera. It even automatic shooting modes! very cool
An desk phone. It's not old, but it's made in the states!
iPod Classic (2005?). so many gigs of storage, it's amazing.
Smith Corona coronet typerwiter. It's electric!
my beloved n64, NES, game boy and other consoles Turns out the ones without optical disks are the ones still working. Surprise!
can't think of anything else - My purpose build devices have been supplanted by a laptop for music, video, reading, writing, learning (cooking especially!), finance tracking, everything.
I like purpose driven devices though, I think I'll find some more
I'm jealous about the Saab. Worst mistake I did was getting rid of mine (I loved that car but GM was going bankrupt and wouldn't sell it to me off lease for a reasonable price).
Fill the tank with water, light the fire, and eventually you get a car that will drive round in circles. Complete with working steam-engine. I've had a few (static) steam-engines over the years, but this was the only want that survived the move across countries.
One day I'm gonna share it with our child, but for the moment I think it'd be a little too dangerous.
I still have my ZX Spectrum+, released in 1984, making it 36 years old. I don't use it daily, but last time I checked, it worked fine. There's a simple mod to get composite video out, so it can be plugged into a modern TV.
This is going to sound strange...but I bought a pen from the company store of the telecom that I worked for back in 2005 (NuVox). It’s my best pen. It still works and I’ve never refilled it.
I have no idea how or why it hasn’t run out of ink yet.
I have a ice cream scooper from the 1960's that was used in my grandfather's restaurant. It's built like brick. I also have his hammer that is at least 50 years old. Beautiful wood. His 1970's Robot Coup food processor is still used to this day by my mother. I also still have his Mac SE complete with it's M0116 keyboard and mouse. It's a shame I'm too afraid to resolder the CRT back onto the main board. But that M0116 does still work with an adapter. It's just incredible to me how all these things have kept working after all this time.
> I have a ice cream scooper from the 1960's that was used in my grandfather's restaurant. It's built like brick.
That is pretty cool! Not only is it a useful tool that won't wear out, but a family heirloom with an interesting story that can be passed down for generations.
And, complimentary username to post subject matter to boot!
- Pison Organizer II (first PDA!)
- Timex LED clock from 1979
- 1970's LED watches and 1960's electo-mechanical watches
- 1947 Philco radio
- TI-59 calculator. Sony Sobax (nixie + delay line) calculator.
- I'm assuming the Kaypro, Sol-20, & TRS-80 4P all work but haven't tried in a while.
- Sega Genesis (just play w/it w/my son last weekend)
- My favorite, my Textronix 4051 & flat-bed plotter finally succumbed to entropy, helped along by water damage in my garage due to the fact that even w/two people the thing was a PITA to move
Nice! I bought a (new) Rancilio Silvia, precisely because it seemed that it should last: simple, spare parts availability, community of people modding & repairing; but I'm still impressed at nearly half a century!
Excellent choice. After I wore out my first crappy espresso machine I did some research and brought a Rancilio Silvia. That was about 14 years ago, it still gets daily use and hasn't missed a beat.
I have a vintage fx-82 calculator [1] that still works. My father bought it when he started working after his engineering, which was passed on to me for my engineering, which was then passed on to my brother for his engineering - which ended 12 yr ago. Last checked the thing a few months ago, it works barring a few problematic keypresses. I am nearly convinced it's alien technology at this point.
Strangely enough, the two gadgets I can think of are from the same year 1979:
- A Sharp MZ-80K computer (my first computer). Granted, I don't use it every day but as long as the original Basic SP-5025 cassette can be read, I know I can write some funny programs full of INPUT A$ and GOTO and GOSUB.
- An Olympia Express Maximatic espresso machine (serial no. from 1979) I bought two years ago and had repaired. The spare parts are easy to find because the current version of that machine is almost the same as the original design from the mid-70s. I use it everyday.
Pentel PS513 and PS535 automatic pencils. First manufactured in the 70s, they're the mechanical pencil equivalent of 13" and 15" macbook pros. By random fluke, Pentel found a box of 535s in the back of a warehouse and sold them on Amazon a few years ago. The reviews are unreal
The oldest thing I have that I still use daily is my bedside clock radio. It's from 1983, when I got it as a birthday present to help me wake up for 1st grade. It says on the bottom that it was "proudly made in Malaysia".
It was my primary alarm from 1st grade through high school and college and much of my adult working life, until about 12 years ago when I switched to using my cell phone.
But we still use it as our primary clock in our bedroom to this day. It keeps time better than most modern clocks.
1938 Frigidaire. Restored with new insulation, wiring, and finish but the compressor and refrigerant are still original - the sealed system has not been opened since it was made.
We have a Singer sewing machine from I think the 1930s that runs fine.
Also a bakelite radio from I think the 1940s that worked fine about 15 years ago but hasn't been used since. I haven't reworked any of it but I think someone else did before we got it in the 1990s.
I've got a PDP-8/e with a 1978 date code that still runs. Sadly I sold my Collins S-Line transmitter (Amateur Radio bands). I think it was made in the late 60's.
I have an Ericsson MC16 (rebadged HP 360LX) WinCE device from 1998. Was given it circa. 2003 when I was five/six. Despite abusing it for years, it still works today.
It was never really anything more than a hobby and its now stored away as a sentimental value piece. When I was younger I regretted losing the serial cable for it and ruining a Dell tower that would have allowed me to sync it to a PC, this was back when I couldn't freely just buy stuff off eBay and space in the house was at a premium. I had a penchant for poking the original box with the stylus so that got tossed eventually.
A couple years ago I got an HP 2133 netbook and although the chipsets have a habit of frying themselves every once in a while (forcing the purchase of new motherboards) the form factor is close enough that it can take over the functions than the old WinCE handhelds and Psions had.
I like the 'robustness' of a lot of tech product designs from the early 2000s and prior. Plastic parts in particular seem to have become rather thin in the years since.
* Atari Portfolio from 1989, still runs great and has some ok games. Extention cards are flaking out though and i should get myself a serial or parallel adapter. Never any luck with an ATM either ;)
* original Gameboy from around the same time, could use a refurbishment or at least a good scrub. And some more/new games.
* iMac G4, The Lamp, works perfectly but I don't really know what to do with it. Still, even powered off a thing of beauty so thats ok.
Works ok. Was still using it a few months ago, but the wheel has started to stick a little in one direction, so I replaced it and now use it as a floater.
My IBM Model F keyboard (83 key XT) is probably the oldest gadget I engage with daily. I've tried every keyswitch under the sun and nothing comes close to the smoothness and tactility of the capacitive buckling springs. It makes basically all other keyswitches feel like flimsy chinese garbage. Also, it's indestructable and quite heavy. As in, you could bludgeon someone to death with it.
This is why I go out of my way to make my websites compatible as far back as I can, including Mosaic, Netscape, and IE.
I myself have several old iOS devices, which I still enjoy using. Two of them belonged to my grandmother, and I like to leave them just the way they are, no OS upgrades.
I also used to have an iPhone which was jailbroken, and I didn't want to deal with the process of upgrading the OS.
Amazingly, my IBM 5170 still works. I'm shocked the power supply still hasn't given up yet. The CMOS battery went bad years ago and has been replaced with some AAA's, luckily no leaks.
My HP Scanjet IIcx scanner is about 30 years old and still works fine. SCSI interface.
I did have to replace the scanner top with a white piece of solid plastic. The original top was very thin plastic veneer bonded onto a foam rubber base which of course by now has self-destructed.
How did HPE and HP fall from the top of the industry in respect to the bottom over those 30 years?
Oh man, I used to use my grandfather's Leica M-series camera when I was in high school. That was some seriously good glass that he had. It was really great for doing sports shots since looking through the rangefinder, I could see what was outside the frame of the telephoto lens to catch the full action.
I'm a photographer for my school's newspaper and I do the same with my Fuji X-Pro2. The optical finder lets me monitor when the action is coming into the frame, and there's even a small electronic finder in the corner to show me exactly what the sensor sees.
I picked up a 60s-era Singer secondhand many years ago and it has served me very well. It was clearly once built into a table, which is the only awkward thing about it. I keep meaning to build a box mount for it, but, well, projects....
I still have an EPS-16+ Digital Sampler with 4 whole megabytes of RAM, but unfortunately its floppy drive hasn't survived the decades, so I can't boot it.
I am listening to an old Philips valve radio from 1952 which has FM and a wonderful rich sound. I am still using an HP-25 LED calculator I bought back in 1977. My oldest piece of software is Microsoft Money from 2002 which now has transaction and investment histories dating back nearly 20 years.
Thinkpad T40. I bought it used about 9 years ago,I think it's about at least 15 years old. Still runs as the day it was made.And the keyboard! They don't make them so comfy anymore.
Body thermometer with mercury. It's got to be at least 30 years old.
I daily one ThinkPad X220 (2011), keep another one sterile for travel, and over time have bought a dozen more for family and friends. Simplifies my tech support chores. Fast enough, parts available, sturdy, good battery life, great keyboard, $100.
Casio CM-100 computer math calculator, circa 1984. It has sat beside my keyboard as I learned BASIC on a Commodore 64... and earned a BS in CS on a NeXT workstation... and as I wrote my doctoral dissertation... and as I wrote inverse kinematics code for a space robot.
Masport push reel mower, would guess somewhere between 1930s and 1960s. It's the most pleasant mower to use, and all it cost was an evening cleaning it up plus an annual visit to the sharpeners.
If electricity is a prerequisite: 1966 Bulova Accutron 214 that I wear most days.
Do you use the phone? We have a dial phone from the 60s-80s that's still hooked up in the living room and rings (I don't know how old it is, but it works perfectly). Very handy when the cordless phone gets left in the basement. I can't say that it gets used much, except during power outages. My folks still use the landline phone quite a lot, and so do I sometimes (poor cell reception in the house).
I do, although these days its connection to the outside world is a SIP trunk via Asterisk. Works just fine as long as I don't need to interact with an IVR which requires asterisks or pound to do stuff (looking at you, Google Meet). Audio quality is better than a cell phone, and I can hear it ring from the back yard.
Sort of off-topic, but I have a New-in-box, sealed from the factory, never opened Sun Sparc 20 pizzabox.
Someone was selling new-old-stock on ebay about five years ago and I bought two of them ... one of them I unboxed and have running and one of them remains NIB.
Mine too! (Updgraded from a monochrome Nokia a couple years ago) Although the battery isn't so great anymore. And reception is bad in certain places, I'm assuming due to the limited spectrums it can use. I haven't found any potential replacements that I'm too excited about.
Sony shortwave/FM radio. Purchased in 1988. I think it's jumped continents at least 5 times. The contacts are a tad corroded, and the antenna is held on with a safety pin, but it still works fine and I use it every single day.
I've got a radiometer which I bought 50 years ago in second grade. It's my single longest-term possession. The bulb is encased in a cube of clear resin, which is probably the only reason it's survived this long.
Casio scientific calculator from the 80s that (the last time I checked, I stumble on it once a year or so) still turns on and works with the original battery.
Off the top of my head, you may just have to set the screen to B&W. Another option would be to boot in System 6 which may give it less trouble than System 7. Can you be specific about what happens when you try to run it? Though it occurs to me I had Beyond Dark Castle on my Macintosh, not the original.
iPhone 7 used by my daughter since she broke her P30.
2014 vintage Latitude E6440 work laptop that simply refuses to die and since I am a SAP developer on ECC 6 there is no justification for giving me anything more modern.
I had one in college. My roommate did too and clipped it to his Grado GR80’s, which was a bogus sight: All the music on a little piece of tech strapped to large headphones. Great little MP3 player!
I wish everything I owned was like this; simple, sturdy, purposeful and around for 80+ years. There's some german word for it; I think one of their green party muckey mucks has a chain of stores along these lines (it doesn't really work, but nice try anyway). I've got a couple of antique radios which are considerably older (1920s era) and still function also, but firing them up is a special occasion.
On the semi-modern front; my X220 thinkpad feels like it could last me the rest of my career, but the new AMD chips finally have me looking sideways at new hardware.
I removed the disk drive cable from the motherboard and plugged a floppy EMU in, and now my kids play Lemonade Stand, Dig Dug, Oregon Trail, Carmen San Diego, and dozens of other classic games. https://www.bigmessowires.com/floppy-emu/