Orphaned technology

Orphaned technology is a descriptive term for computer products, programs, and platforms that have been abandoned by their original developers. Orphaned technology refers to software, such as abandonware and antique software, but also to computer hardware and practices. In computer software standards and documentation, deprecation is the gradual phasing-out of a software or programming language feature, while orphaning usually connotes a sudden discontinuation, usually for business-related reasons, of a product with an active user base.

For users of technologies that have been withdrawn from the market, there is a choice between maintaining their software support environments in some form of emulation, or switching to other supported products, possibly losing capabilities unique to their original solution.

Abandoning a technology is not only due to bad or outmoded idea. There are instances, such as the case of some medical technologies, where products are phased out the market because they are no longer viable as business ventures.[1] Some orphaned technologies do not suffer complete abandonment or obsolescence. For instance, there is the case of IBM's Silicon Germanium (SiGe) technology, which is a program that produced an in situ doped alloy as a replacement for the conventional implantation step in silicon semiconductor bipolar process.[2] The technology was previously orphaned but was continued again by a small team at IBM so that it emerged as a leading product in the high-volume communications marketplace.[2] Technologies orphaned due to failure on the part of their startup developers can be picked up by another investor. This is demonstrated by Wink, an IoT technology orphaned when its parent company Quirky filed for bankruptcy.[3] The platform, however, continued after it was purchased by another company called Flex.[3]

Some well-known examples of orphaned technology include:

Symbolics Inc's operating systems, Genera and OpenGenera, were twice orphaned, as they were ported from LISP machines to computers using the Alpha 64-bit CPU.

User groups often exist for specific orphaned technologies, such as The Hong Kong Newton User Group,[6] Symbolics Lisp [Machines] Users' Group (now known as the Association of Lisp Users),[7] and Newton Reference.[8] The Save Sibelius group sprang into existence because Sibelius (scorewriter) users feared the application would be orphaned after its owners Avid Tech fired most of the development team, who were thereafter hired by Steinberg to develop the competing product, Dorico.

See also

References

  1. Ritter, Arthur; Hazelwood, Vikki; Valdevit, Antonio; Ascione, Alfred (2011). Biomedical Engineering Principles, Second Edition. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press. p. 457. ISBN 9781439812334.
  2. Singh, Raminderpal; Oprysko, Modest; Harame, David (2004). Silicon Germanium: Technology, Modeling, and Design. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. pp. 40. ISBN 047144653X.
  3. Staff, Connected World (October 2018). "October 2018: Abandoned Tech: When IoT Devices and Solutions Get Left Behind". Connected World. Retrieved 2019-07-16.
  4. (19 August 2008). Request by Sibelius users for a Mosaic to Sibelius conversion application. Sibelius (software)
  5. (2 September 2009). Opcode Web site finally taken down. CNET
  6. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2007-03-11. Retrieved 2006-09-27.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. "About Us". Association of Lisp Users. Archived from the original on 2013-01-21. Retrieved 2013-06-13.
  8. "Newton Reference". Panix.com. 1998-02-27. Retrieved 2017-04-03.
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