• Jimmycakes@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    Ancient industrial machines use ancient windows computers. This has been known forever. There’s a whole niche industry of very expensive ram and hard drives and other components keeping this industry going

    • Krudler@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      Yeah man. Details are going to be fuzzy here, but I think it was only in recent memory where Boeing upgraded the planes in Japan to no longer need floppy disks.

  • MonkderVierte@lemmy.ml
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    10 days ago

    The elevator was running Windows XP.

    Clearly an extreme case of overengineering. A elevator has no business running more than a few microcontrollers.

    • GenosseFlosse@feddit.org
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      10 days ago

      In highrises with lots of stops and users, it uses some more advanced software to schedule the optimal stops, or distribute the load between multiple lifts. A similar concept exists for HDD controllers, where the read write arm must move to different positions to load data stored on different plates and sectors, and Repositioning the head is a slow and expensive process that cuts down the data transfer rate.

      • HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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        10 days ago

        This requires little more than a 286. It’s an elevator. Responding in times measured in seconds. What kind of computations do you think are required here? Imaginary quaternion matrixes? Squared?

        • GenosseFlosse@feddit.org
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          10 days ago

          Yes, but if you have it as a Windows program it’s easier to configure on a screen with mouse and keyboard, change settings, display help files or give the source code to someone else to make changes or add features.

          • Fluffy Kitty Cat@slrpnk.net
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            10 days ago

            also it was probably not too expensive to grad a bog standard PC off the shelf and do it on that. I’ve see raspis in the wild doing tasks like that. and those will be outdated by the time they’re replaced too

  • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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    11 days ago

    I run a computer on Win7 at work, because it needs some important legacy software. It can’t be containered because it has a nasty licence manager.

    And my oscilloscope runs on Win98.

  • lmuel@sopuli.xyz
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    11 days ago

    I know it’s not exactly the point of the article but for a lot of things, I reckon a good amount of ‘innovation’ was pretty pointless. I personally don’t think I ever needed anything that Office 2003 can’t do… (Of course I don’t use any MS office to begin with but you get the point)

    • gamer@lemm.ee
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      11 days ago

      I’ve been trying tk get family to switch to Linux, but some are irrationally attached to MS Word. I wonder if Office 2003 will run in Wine?

  • Pistcow@lemm.ee
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    12 days ago

    Mail sorter for a company I worked for uses Windows 3.1.

    My parents ancient HP from 1997, I sold the motherboard with popped capacitors for $250. I informed the buyer of the condition and he said he didn’t care, he’d fix it, but they needed it for some legacy hardware their company functioned on.

    • LupusBlackfur@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      😂 🤣

      Similarly, my Dad ran his medical office on Win98 until he died (2011).

      Of course, he had no support for OS or the medical office software other than himself (and me).

      Had a supplier of inexpensive old machines/parts.

      All cause he refused to pay the $5k required to upgrade the medical office software that ran on those machines. 🤷‍♂️

      • vaionko@sopuli.xyz
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        11 days ago

        My dad’s company still runs software from 2002 for recording sales and sending bills. Runs fine on Windows 10 surprisingly

  • shalafi@lemmy.world
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    12 days ago

    Some might be surprised how many systems are still running on AS400s. IBM still makes and maintains IBMi, the modern iteration. My last company wrote our flagship product for these machines, all green screen. Our customers would sometimes move to our GUI product and jump right back to the prompt menus. Hey, if you gotta move fast and have a bulletproof system, text menus are the only way to fly!

    By my god, the skill set for running and programming those beasts touches on almost nothing I’ve learned in 30+ years of IT work. Wish I had got experience in that part of the company, seen some solid job posts for that sorta tech.

    • spongebue@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      I worked in the airline industry for years and learned a GUI overlay for one system and another entirely green screen system called SHARES (see if you can guess the airline). Honestly I kind of enjoyed working with those systems; there’s some refreshing “back to basics” feeling kind of like driving a manual transmission.

      In my current job I’ve been using another legacy system. Well, my job was to create a relatively modern service for the legacy system to call, but none of the remaining developers knew how to use the extensions of that system that does SOAP calls. So I had to learn just enough of that legacy system to hold their hands through the parts that call my service. Kind of fun, to be honest!

  • PeteWheeler@lemmy.world
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    11 days ago

    I would still be using Windows 7 if it was safe to connect to the internet.

    I can’t believe government systems are just open to cyber security like that.

    Are there not cyber terrorists for some teenager that has tried to do anything with these unsecured systems?

    • HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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      10 days ago

      Why would Windows 7 not be “safe” to connect to the internet? Do you understand how any of this works?

      • Krudler@lemmy.world
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        10 days ago

        Lemmy is overloaded with people that puff up and want to present like they know things about tech, when they know basically nothing.

        Get a hardware firewall, get basic safe practices in place, don’t do basic user operations as admin, and configure shit correctly. If you think that your OS is there to protect you, you are a tech foooooooooooooool

        • HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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          10 days ago

          I just connected my Windows 7 machine to the internet and two Russians jumped out my serial port! One is holding me down while the other one is stealing the CPU from my washing machine! Send help!

            • HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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              10 days ago

              Well one did fuck me in the ass while the other one stole my favorite underwear right out from the delicate cycle. Total animals.

      • M0oP0o@mander.xyz
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        10 days ago

        No, and that is saddly the standard these days. Its all just bullshit sales tatics and a weird take on what risks are and are not involved with legacy tech.

        • HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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          10 days ago

          Like dude how am I supposed to order burgers through skip the dishes if I don’t have Windows 11 and a 64 core CPU with 256GB of DDR18 super RAM running terabytes of vibe-coded AI slop!???

    • Smoogs@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      Just slap some bit defender on it. That’s all that we have to do with windows 10 and we’re all good to go. Hey if Linux can run on the same box for all these years and be safe theres no reason why any windows system can’t be safe with a simple add on.

      Windows 11 is just a tmp chip added to board

      Srsly that is all. Something smaller than a thumb drive changed and they are trying to convince the world to make more waste. It’s fucking stupid. Microsoft can eat fat ass.

  • KulunkelBoom@lemm.ee
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    11 days ago

    MS DOS 6.6 for me - I enjoy the power of a 286 processor and much smaller instruction sets.

    :O

    • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      Idk, it was horrendously insecure, would freeze a lot, and missing creature comforts like window tiling.

      Tbh I think you’re letting nostalgia blind you to XP’s flaws a little.

      If they kept refining Win7 it would’ve been great.

      • Lka1988@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        10 days ago

        Idk, it was horrendously insecure, would freeze a lot, and missing creature comforts like window tiling.

        It was significantly more secure than it’s DOS-based predecessor of the time, Windows ME (that’s a whole other rabbit hole; if you wanna talk insecure and buggy as fuck - look no further). That’s what people don’t realize, they look at the past through a modern lens. You gotta look at it from the time it was released. There’s a reason mainstream consumer-focused Windows editions dropped DOS and moved to the NT kernel. XP was the first real consumer version of Windows based on XP NT.

        If they kept refining Win7 it would’ve been great.

        They did, it was called “Windows 8” and nobody liked it.

        • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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          10 days ago

          But before ME there was Windows 2000, with its particularly gorgeous spin of the classical design, and other than appearance - being kinda same as XP, but faster.

          XP was the first real consuner version of Windows based on XP.

          On NT you mean, and no, W2K was a consumer system.

          • Lka1988@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            10 days ago

            XP was the first real consuner version of Windows based on XP.

            On NT you mean

            Whoops! Yes, NT.

            But before ME there was Windows 2000, with its particularly gorgeous spin of the classical design, and other than appearance - being kinda same as XP, but faster.

            […]

            and no, W2K was a consumer system.

            W2K was most definitely not built with consumers in mind; the base edition was “Professional” and was meant to be a workstation OS. It was a bit of an oddball in that a not-insignificant amount of power users preferred it at home over 98/Me - but it was a business-oriented system first and foremost. XP added a lot of features over 2000, including more consumer-oriented tools and applications. That’s why I specified XP as “the first real consumer version”.

            Personal anecdote: When I was in jr high, the “family PC” was a Toshiba laptop loaded with W2K, and compared to the W98 system we had before, 2000 was certainly not meant for “regular” home users. That’s what Me was supposed to be, but we all know how that went… IMO, I’m almost certain that the downfall of Me, paired with W2K being as good as it was at the time, was part of the driving force for MS to base future consumer versions on the NT kernel.

    • eleitl@lemm.ee
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      11 days ago

      I ran Linux 1994ish. Amiga OS before. Amstrad CPC 464 before. A friend ran Sinclair ZX-80, that was the first system I had access to.

  • shalafi@lemmy.world
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    12 days ago

    People keep saying to keep these XP machines off the internet. I seriously doubt there’s much threat, especially for even older OS’s like 98 and 95. It’s the very devil just trying to browse with them, nothing much out there is going to be able to attack them. Security through obscurity indeed!

    In any case, we’re no longer in the Wild West days when people had machines hooked directly to the internet and a firewall was a third-party addon. LOL, ZoneAlarm anyone!

    We all have a basic firewall built into our routers so unless you deliberately expose services you’re fairly bulletproof to scanners. I remember scanning for Win2000 machines in blocks of IPs, long after it was defunct. Plenty were out there!

    • Blemgo@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      You are forgetting targeted attacks. A blind attack would pretty much not have much of an effect indeed, however if the attacker knows the machine, then it’s easy for the attackers to exploit these vulnerability if left “out in the open”, and cause havoc, possibly create a lot of damages or leech informations pumped into those machines via old Windows installations.

      • Doom@ttrpg.network
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        12 days ago

        For a business sure.

        You wanna hack my dnd campaign and some pictures of my cock? Sure whatever dude. All financial and important shit goes through my phone anyway and that’s likely to be hacked from the institutions I use.

          • Doom@ttrpg.network
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            11 days ago

            While that is awful and sucks. Again, probably won’t really target me

            If China or America use my machine as a member of their DDoS bot swarm likely I probably couldn’t even fight back as much as I’d like. Either one of those countries could have backdoor bullshit into any system you think of.

            If it is a nefarious third party maybe I want them to use my computer to attack the financial system of these capitalist regimes or to harm the infrastructure of an oppressive government.

            Again, have my cock and dnd campaign. If my system runs slow and annoys me guess I’ll deal with it. They already will get my information from the millions of sources compiling and collecting it.

            I dunno doesn’t really make me shake in my boots

            • TheBeege@lemmy.world
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              11 days ago

              This is short-sighted. It also reeks of “Fuck you, I got mine!” I know that’s not your intention. I just think you haven’t thought super hard about it. I was the same with privacy concerns.

              So let me throw some edge cases at you.

              You remember the network time protocol vulnerability that was used to power botnets for a little bit? Well, until everyone upgraded their shit, service providers had to just block IP ranges of compromised machines until enough machines in that block stopped DDoS’ing them.

              So what happens when some script kiddy pays for time on the botnet, which includes your box, to smash Wizards while you’re trying to look things up? Or what if someone uses your box as a jump box to go attack some giant corporation, and shit gets traced back to you? Or what if someone decides you’re the unlucky one where their whole goal is to dominate your entire home network, and they get your phone when it’s on your home wifi?

  • Fox@sh.itjust.works
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    12 days ago

    At my old workplace, there was numerous XP machines still going. They were running old machine equipment, and basically served as a controller for the entire machine.

    As it turns out, it was cheaper to keep these XP stations, instead of buying a completely new Hydrolic press, or whatever it was running, which cost several hundred of thousands of dollars.

    One day one of these computers stopped working, and we immediately tried to get the software to work on a brand new W10 replacement. Took us a week of drivers hell, until we eventually went to the basement, found an exact replica, and swapped the HDD over.

    The company, making these heavy machineries, went bankrupt in the early 2000s, and there was literally no way of getting the software to run on anything besides that original box.

    • catloaf@lemm.ee
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      12 days ago

      Yup. Take backups, have spares, and keep it off the Internet and it’ll work just fine.

      Pro tip, you can get IDE to CF adapters if you want to put an SSD in those old machines to really see them fly. Just be aware that they don’t have nearly as good write durability as a real SSD, so keep write heavy operations on the HDD.

      • cmnybo@discuss.tchncs.de
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        12 days ago

        You can get industrial grade CF cards that use SLC memory. They have much better write endurance than normal CF cards.

    • IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz
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      12 days ago

      There’s still things like that on my workplace today. I think there’s some older, rarely used CNC with Win98 on the controller. We just keep spares around when they break, but that’s cheaper than replacing the whole machinery. Also there’s some XP stations running software for an industrial machine which would cost quarter of a million to replace. Some of those need access to network drives and such but they live in a strictly isolated VLAN.

      And, as far as I’ve told at least, there was no option at any point to upgrade just the computers on those things. It’s always the whole assembly line or whatever they’re connected to. There’s not many companies willing to throw hundreds of thousands every 3-5 years to replace perfectly working equipment.

      • Fox@sh.itjust.works
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        11 days ago

        It’s funny, because this scenario actually happened in our CNC hall.

        The guys over there were working with SolidWorks and Mastercam. I never really got too involved with their work, other than installing the software remotely for them.

        It could very well have been a CNC machine that this procedure was about. I just know that they had all kinds of equipment in there, along with a hydrolic press, which peaked my interest the most because of a certain Finnish youtuber haha.

    • undrwater@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      I’d like a law that software / hardware companies who file for bankruptcies must release the source / files for their tech to an open source repository.

      • guy_threepwood@lemmy.world
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        11 days ago

        If you are a big company there are often ESCROW agreements for things like this. I have encountered the “data dumps” from time to time and whilst it’s “better” it’s not ideal. Half finished documentarian, virtual machines of mis-configured OS installs… it’s almost as if it was just a straight copy of the development environment as it was just as they made the final version of the software…

        But it’s better than nothing.

        Main issue I can see with this forcing open source would be libraries and frameworks licensed from others who would likely still be in business and wouldn’t agree to those parts becoming open sourced. See also WinAMP https://www.theregister.com/2024/10/16/opensourcing_of_winamp_goes_badly/

  • hperrin@lemmy.ca
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    12 days ago

    “Stuck”

    Imagine being stuck using something that works for 30 years.

    • MurrayL@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      Right? If it still works then it still works.

      If the article was talking about anything other than tech/software, we’d be praising its longevity.

      • Damage@feddit.it
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        12 days ago

        I mean, you could read the article. Many users are unhappy with the performance or reliability.

        • Lv_InSaNe_vL@lemmy.world
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          11 days ago

          And a lot of people are actually stuck because the Windows XP/7 machine is attached to industrial equipment that costs an unbelievable amount of money or is just impossible to replace.

        • HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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          10 days ago

          Why do people keep repeating this tired propaganda? What exactly do you think will happen?

          • LoveSausage@discuss.tchncs.de
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            10 days ago

            No1 rule in IT security: Keep shit updated.

            Now I haven’t used windows other than managed work stuff for a decade but I would assume that the problem with the already existing nightmare of windows would be a lot worse if completely void of bugfixes.

            But if you have an insight in to an entire field where the experts disagree on the subject I’m very keen on hearing it.

  • shalafi@lemmy.world
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    12 days ago

    I was tearing out ancient infrastructure for a new office and my eye kept going to a rectangular square box on the wall. Finally realized it was a PC! The cause of death was clear, PSU fan died, killed itself from heat. It was a form factor I had never seen, but standard nonetheless. It was running an answering machine system in DOS, still worked! Such a rare machine I’ve only found a single reference on the web and a single video about it. 1999, 486XS (I know, would kill for a DX, it’s soldered on), upgraded from 2x 2MB SIMMs to a whopping 2x 64MB SIMMs. Imagine what that would have cost in the day!

    LONG story, but I got it running Windows 95b. 3.1 was just too much challenge to get it networked and happy. Much pain was removed when I got a USB floppy emulator. Can’t do jack without a floppy! Broke the network card drivers, need to start over. Had it running Doom with a legit SoundBlaster card and could RDP into over the network.

    It was an amazing journey getting it all together and updated. Most of that knowledge is gone from the internet, and I sure don’t remember all the tricks. Going to be my first token ring machine! LOL, had to get parts from Romania and trash cans.