Nooooo
Computer chips are in phones and splitters and coaters if the chip fails you need the same one from prehistory or scrap the splitter etc.
When you phone chip fails you trash can it...
Virtual machines (VMs) that simulate no longer supported software and hardware platforms are a mainstay of the industry. Working from home I have access via VPN to an entire range of VMs on which I can test software still under development for backward compatibility.
This very Windows 7 machine on which I am typing contains a virtual simulation of MS-DOS running on an ancient Intel 8088 segmented architecture CPU chipset, and it functions eerily correctly. On it I can still run an equally ancient native x86 assembly language graphics application* and it too works utterly perfectly.
Besides, how do you think all of those old discontinued film scanners keep working? The ones whose drivers were never updated beyond Windows XP? Well, they're running on WinXP VMs hosted on much later and more modern software and hardware architectures.
Or in the case of someone I know, a Nikon 5000 ED scanner is running on a Windows VM hosted on a Mac, with nary a problem.
Ken
* Does anyone remember the stunningly beautiful
SkyGlobe planetarium program by Mark Haney of KlassM** Software? This would have been in the late 80s to early 90s, when men were men and software was pure opcodes and chip-level programming.
** You know, Class M, from the Vulcan
Minshara***, denoting an oxygen/nitrogen/liquid water planet capable of supporting carbon-based life forms, including humans? If it ain't Class M, then you don't even want to think about beaming down...
*** One of a series of classifications from the Vulcan Planetary Classification System, the term roughly translates into English as
mentally defective. It's use thus derived as a cleverly pejorative Vulcan description of Earth and its illogical native inhabitants.****
**** Which brings us back to APUG.*****
*****But I digress...
