At one point, Fry's electronics switched from a super old text-based PoS system to an at-the-time modern one, and the new one was significantly slower and less reliable.
codingdave · 2h ago
The AS/400 is more recently branded as the IBM iSeries, and while it may have been from 1988, it has been and continues to be updated and maintained. Just as Costco's apps on the systems are surely updated and maintained.
So if we accept the premise that Costco runs on software from 1988, then we must also say that Linux-based systems run on software from 1991. Or shall we take this ill-advised path even further and say that Macs run on software from 1969?
litoE · 1h ago
I was wondering about that. Even if they keep their hardware from 1988, it needs maintenance: disk drives wear out, power supplies burn out, CRT monitors die, keyboards suffer coffee spills, etc.
WheelsAtLarge · 1h ago
This makes better sense. Place were I worked had old software that they didn't want to replace. It kind of worked, to a point. We were always afraid it would go down and we had 0 support from the vendor. We were always on the edge thinking the whole system was going to fall apart.
So if we accept the premise that Costco runs on software from 1988, then we must also say that Linux-based systems run on software from 1991. Or shall we take this ill-advised path even further and say that Macs run on software from 1969?