In the world of technology everything eventually becomes outdated and obsolete. This is true for hardware, as well as, software.
Yes and no. Hardware more so then software. I still use the same tools in some software that have been around in that same software package for 20 yrs. They are still viable today. If they weren't viable, then yes, I would agree with that. For some things, it's not just me holding on, but a lot of those tools are truly still viable and still produce quality results compared to the newer, "more efficient" tools in the same software package today.
Support does go away that's for sure, if "you" are unable to maintain "your" own support and figure things out, then yes, it is time to move on. Or if the legacy software is unable to keep you running as efficiently as you can, then time to upgrade. This is one that I can actually get behind the software vendors and support (oh the irony).
Some programs, still have yet to have 64 bit hardware support. Still don't have GPU render support. Talk about moving on, they need to as well.
PC operating systems have gone from Windows 98, to XP, to 7, Vista, 8, 8.1 and now Windows 10
While I technically think of Linux and Mac OSs as PC operating systems as well, I would actually argue that Win 10 is less of a PC operating system then the others. With this really bad craze of subscription software or software that just needs a perpetual internet connection, we are going back to the dummy terminal days and our computers are less "Personal" then they used to be.
I'm not a fan, at all, of production computers that need a perpetual internet connection to run. And a lot of the production software nowadays is requiring it in order for their software to run.
Win 98, Vista, 7 and 8.1, I actually still run on a 2 yr old Lenovo ThinkStation. Linux as the host OS. I could run an XP as well, but I didn't care for that OS all that much and I'm certainly not going to Win 10 unless I just can't handle putting it off.
No. They will not fix the server. Just SOOL
One of the many reasons why I do not like software that needs perpetual internet connectivity. This right here, to me is a step backwards to the old dummy terminal days.