• Ghostalmedia
    link
    292 years ago

    Apps that haven’t been updated in 10 years are often incompatible on just about any platform.

    • Cegorach
      link
      fedilink
      72 years ago

      depends on the app

      you have something to access some cloud-api-stuff? yeah, probably all calls fail

      some game that uses hardware-specific things? might break too

      your average clock app or document viewer? that got a decent chance it’ll still run.

      It’s a question of how fast your OS changes and how mature APIs have gotten. Android is a lot more stable now, than it was 12 years ago.

      And if you look at truly mature OSes, like Linux or Windows, you probably can still run most apps that are multiple decades old. (For Win that means pretty much anything that was written for Win32(s) and newer - so even stuff that was around on Win 3.11)

    • NikkiNikkiNikki
      link
      fedilink
      32 years ago

      That’s when it’s between the line of “You have to buy the hardware” and “Emulate it”. Something too old for modern devices, and too new for emulators to have been made.

      I still want to fucking play the original Infinity Blade. I WAS SO JEALOUS of my brother because he had his fancy Iphone 4 and could play. But by the time I got a phone it was already old news and taken off the app store.

    • @ghariksforge
      link
      22 years ago

      I can still play 15+ old games on my Linux laptop with wine. It just works.

      • Ghostalmedia
        link
        English
        12 years ago

        I was more referring to running things natively. But yeah, if I throw an emulator on something, I can run ancient stuff on a newer OS.

        • @ghariksforge
          link
          English
          22 years ago

          wine is not an emulator. It’s even in the name :)