What's something that's seen as Obsolete, but isn't?
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Caring about your employees as if they were humans.
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Your caveman brain. People think they're educated an enlightened and everything they do now is so well thought out. Nope, the caveman is in the driving seat for all of us. Even your most high level meetings and interviews are influenced by how hungry, horny, or hurt you are by a teasing comment yesterday. Everyone is looking to establish dominance at any cost, when you don't really need to.
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Obligatory thought to cobol, which is stil the backbone of banking computers.
I would also think to the good old electromechanical relay which are still pretty common
More political, but whatever what imperator Musk thinks Privacy isn't obsolete
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Fax machines. Phone lines are pretty private, and sending a fax is usually more secure than emailing something, especially if someone else manages your email.
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I'd say vinyl. Looks like a thing from the 60s but it's still pretty relevant today
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Fax machines. Phone lines are pretty private, and sending a fax is usually more secure than emailing something, especially if someone else manages your email.
Also all of german bureaucracy still works only with fax
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I'd say vinyl. Looks like a thing from the 60s but it's still pretty relevant today
I want tot go one further and say music cassettes. Love their sound and way more compact than vinyl. Sadly, there's no good new hardware being made at the moment, although I really like my We Are Rewind player, it's far from HiFi.
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Paper; Notebooks.
Key only physical door locks.
Manual transmission cars.
Not having any IoT appliances, and not connecting everything you own to WiFi.
Hard drive full of MP3s.
Cash.
Not being available for a call if you're not at home.Source: work tangential enough to cybersecurity.
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Fax machines. Phone lines are pretty private, and sending a fax is usually more secure than emailing something, especially if someone else manages your email.
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Also all of german bureaucracy still works only with fax
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Paper; Notebooks.
Key only physical door locks.
Manual transmission cars.
Not having any IoT appliances, and not connecting everything you own to WiFi.
Hard drive full of MP3s.
Cash.
Not being available for a call if you're not at home.Source: work tangential enough to cybersecurity.
Cash
I heard of some drug dealers not accepting cash where I live
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NATO according to the previous article
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It somehow suprises me but also not really thinking how traditionalist they are
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I love Technology Connections
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Caring about your employees as if they were humans.
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Phones from 2000-2010. Linux/PostmarketOS allows you to run these as mini webservers with webcam's built-in (depending on chip support)
Also PostmarketOS are looking for a new name, so if you've got a suggestion put it here: https://nextcloud.postmarketos.org/apps/forms/s/cAYZZrCqLnrfMPEMAAonCWwx
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Cash
I heard of some drug dealers not accepting cash where I live
What are they taking? Monero? Gift cards?
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Magnetic tape. It's one of the better long-term offline backup solutions. It is compact, inexpensive, has no moving parts (bearings, motors, reader heads), no scratchable surfaces, and can last for decades in a moderately climate-controlled room.
Just keep it away from magnets... or iron vaults. According to an anecdote (that I can't find right now), a large bank vault was repurposed as an offsite backup storage, except it kept wiping the magnetic tapes because the thick iron walls reacted to changes in the geomagnetic field.