10 year rule

Doc Shipley doc at mdrconsult.com
Wed Nov 17 11:31:42 CST 2004


Computer Collector E-Mail Newsletter wrote:
> The terms are too similar, people will just get more confused.
> 
> All I intended to do when I started this discussion topic was to point out the
> obsurdity of considering things like the Web and Pentiums as "vintage" (or any
> other synonym).  But then others observed back that I was being short-sighted
> -- if you ignore that actual age, "vintage" just means "anything considered
> obsolete by the mainstream," and that's a good enough answer for me.  But I do
> think that 15 years, not 10, is a better divider between what's just "old" and
> what's truly vintage.

   I think you're all looking at this completely backwards.

   The rate of electronic evolution (OK, change) has *accelerated* over 
time, meaning that computers are obsoleted much more quickly than their 
older counterparts.  Therefore the age limit for this list should be 
*lowered* to about 8 years now.

   Sometime in about 12 years a computer that's two weeks old will 
qualify as a classic.

   I'll be grabbing my hat....


	Doc



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