I own and use everyday a 1939 Frigidaire ("Made only by General Motors"), and a 1937 Marlboro Universal gas range; they run perfectly and likely will for a long time. This winter at a local thrift store I found a 1936 GE mixer that works great, has all the attachments, and looks nearly new.
My favorite bike is a 1972 Raleigh 3 speed. I listen regularly to a 1918 Victrola. My landline phone is a 1920s Western Electric E1 desk model, with separate oak ringer-box (one reason I won't soon ditch the landline, even though mostly I use a mobile). Pretty much every room in my house has one or more examples of superseded, but working gadget.
I've got no desire to live in the past - modern medicine and the right to vote are wonderful things. Most of my job, leisure time, shopping, bill-paying, etc. are done online. But vintage technology appeals to me in a way that the new stuff just can't. My bakelite phone has been useful to generations of people, for its intended purpose, for about 80 years - I won't be able to say that about my HTC One.