keaxtu
abandonware should be public domain, force companies to actively support and provide products if they don't want to lose the rights to them.
omikronsoul
Game companies hate emulation, but none of them seem to understand that a lot of us would just buy ROMs from them directly if we could. I don't want a fifth remake of Final Fantasy IV, I want to pay five bucks for 3MB file you already made bank with thirty years ago.Nobody who wants to play something fo the purpose of retrogaming is going to consider a $40 remake as the alternative option, and we're certainly not going to let the original disappear. They're crying about opportunity cost for a product they are not even selling.
justlemeremember
op i know you're probably talking about like, video games, etc. but this is also critical for research science - my lab has so much abandonware, either because the company's out of business, or the company decided not to maintain it, and it's a fucking nightmare, we have two Windows 95 computers that are CRITICAL for performing experiments/data analysis because the software needed is abandonware, one of the main roles for a guy in my lab is to maintain these little dinosaurs because if they go out, we lose access to ~20 years of raw data for research, part of why is that these companies also make their own file types, and make difficult-to-impossible to convert those files types without their specif software, by habit, i convert all research files to more generic versions (txt, pdf, tif, etc) so i minimize risk of losing my shit, but some stuff can't be converted.
for example, we have a microscope that is perfectly functional, good microscope, but its software is abandonware because the company refuses to maintain it. the company is still in business, still makes essentially the exact same software, butt they made a lot of the old tech incompatible with new software to force people to buy the new microscope tech. it would cost a quarter million dollar to replace this microscope, this perfectly good microscope.
so like, i know a lot of people look at the original post and go 'well, op just wants old video games to play' (which is valid! games companies should not be able to push shit to abandonware and close it off) but also this is critical for like, biomedical research, if y'all had any idea how much basic infrastructure built on science relies on shit that is technically abandonware, you would probably be horrified.
this post was submitted on 12 Nov 2023
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The IRS still uses data tapes, which has caused some issues lately
I know that they were using a far older format, but data tapes for cold backups is absolutely still a viable technology in 2023. Fujifilm make 18TB LTO tapes. Yeah they only run at 400MB/s, but they’re designed to backup continuously so speed doesn’t really matter.
Yeah I briefly owned an older IBM server (2010-ish) that had a tape drive. It was pretty cool to mess around with, but I don't need cold storage like that. I sold that server for a $150 profit lol.
Can't argue with 45TB of storage, fair enough!
...Huh.
One boggles at how they must train workers to use the equipment.