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by worrycue 1016 days ago
Companies like Apple kind of do it for you as you upgrade from iPhone to iPhone and data from your old phone is transferred to the new one.
1 comments

In 120 years, no one may have heard of Apple.
We already have 40+ year old apple machines that the vintage community are preserving / keeping in operation / archiving software.
Apple could go bankrupt in 30 years, and 30 years after that, only a tiny smattering of historians might known of it. What would be known 60 years later?

Nothing is certain.

I doubt it. They created the industry milestone products. People like driving vintage cars, operating vintage computers and playing vintage games. These formats aren't going anywhere.
How many people restore old carriages, and use horses to get around? How many people know the manufacturer's names for those carriages?

Sure historians will know, which is a bit of what antique collectors are. But in 120 years? People won't have a clue what Apple was.

In the course of 100+ years, Apple is not important. It had about 15 years of groundbreaking change, now it has none.

And to be fair on that, the computing market is fairly mature now. Their latest AR gambit seems interesting, but it hardly revolutionary.

Look at Rolex watches. They were the pinnacle of innovation in their sector, and a must have for anyone even mildly well to do. Sort of like Apple. They're basically gone now.