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New 48 years is a long time! :)
The longest time for me was 35 years in the house in Charlotte, NC. And even there, my wife had me clean out some stuff that I kept from Red Hook, NY like an S100 machine that I built. The Radio Shack TRS-80 she had me give away to some friends after I bought the original IBM PC. That kind of stuff was a repeat when I bought newer devices.
Alex

"There is a cult of ignorance in the United States, and there has always been. The strain of anti-intellectualism has been a constant thread winding its way through our political and cultural life, nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that "my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge."

-- Isaac Asimov
New 17 years in our current flat must be my personal record.
New Now I have to look up some dates
The house I grew up in might still be my longest address, but the one just previous to this is really close.
--

Drew
New 27 years here
Not bad for a starter house.
Regards,
-scott
Welcome to Rivendell, Mr. Anderson.
New 20 out of ~30 years
I stayed at the house we now own with the dear friend who built it during my first stint in the US. I still have a functional Amiga 500 going back to those days. (Unfortunately, the PSU to the harddrive unit is AWOL so it is back to floppies.)
New The S100 machine was mine . . .
. . but nearly all the rest of my electronic waste is stuff I brought back from client's upgrades and move changes (39 years). Unfortunately, it all went very obsolete very fast. Some is new. I have a Digiboard, two Qume serial terminals, and a CRT monitor all in their original packaging.

Several of the PCs were in use here for a time - client cast-offs worked just fine running Linux and OS/2 (now ArcaOS). As they became old, there were always new ones coming in to replace them. Only in the last couple of years have I built new machines for myself.
New I had a stack of qume terminals
Along with a few televideos and ADMs on an s100 bus system that had lots of slots for individual CPUs and terminal connections. That's how I learned CP/M. It was my brother's system but he dropped it in my lap and said learn this and teach me. That s100 bus system along with a couple qumes were the only thing my brother kept from that time frame for the next 30 years.

The qumes were always the prettiest terminals compared to the others. It seemed the others took their design in the later years from the qumes.
New Keeping old tech...
I had a big roll of assorted bits of Ethernet coax for years - my uncle salvaged it from somewhere, I think, and put a heap in the walls of the house he was living in at the time. I don't know if I got the scraps or just collected it myself. Went obsolete so fast...

I've also got a highly versatile parallel to serial convertor box I liberated from a previous employer. We used them all the time to run printer services on the LAN as we could run serial lines from the servers a long way. I still don't know why I kept it as I've never used it.

Wade.
New I use an Ethernet to Parallel converter.
My two dot matrix printers are too old to have an ethernet port. They will be in use for many years yet, as they are very lightly used.
New These hail from the heyday of Banyan VINES. :-)
The bank I worked for had a modest (~30 servers) Banyan VINES network and most of the printers were connected to servers. But server-connected printers were not ideal as some sorts of maintenance required rebooting the server. Banyan later introduced a thing called "PC Print" so you could use a random networked PC as a printer server. This was much better and these serial-to-parallel converters started being disused. :-)

Wade.
New Re: Keeping old tech...
I think I still have a Bernoulli Box (one of the smaller 44MB cartridge models) hiding in the closet behind a box of random tangled cables and other ephemera. It would have moved twice with me since it was last used.
New I have a double Bernoulli Box
It's in the huge mound of electronic waste waiting to be hauled away. It was given to me by a tax preparer in lieu of payment. Never did work for that guy again. Tax preparers are really cheap. Doctors, at least, will eventually pay you. Lawyers, of course, never pay, "So sue me".
New We were in our previous house for 21 years.
Been here 5, and I will not move again unless I absolutely have to.

It’s a process I detest more than just about anything.
New I also hate moving. Particularly the packing.
     Cleaning out the garage - (Andrew Grygus) - (19)
         Is this your Swedish death cleaning? -NT - (drook) - (3)
             Had to look that up. - (Andrew Grygus)
             My Swedish death cleaning… - (rcareaga) - (1)
                 The advantages of _not_ owning a house. With garages, sheds, barns, and other outbuildings. -NT - (CRConrad)
         48 years is a long time! :) - (a6l6e6x) - (13)
             17 years in our current flat must be my personal record. -NT - (CRConrad) - (3)
                 Now I have to look up some dates - (drook)
                 27 years here - (malraux)
                 20 out of ~30 years - (scoenye)
             The S100 machine was mine . . . - (Andrew Grygus) - (6)
                 I had a stack of qume terminals - (crazy)
                 Keeping old tech... - (static) - (4)
                     I use an Ethernet to Parallel converter. - (Andrew Grygus) - (1)
                         These hail from the heyday of Banyan VINES. :-) - (static)
                     Re: Keeping old tech... - (altmann) - (1)
                         I have a double Bernoulli Box - (Andrew Grygus)
             We were in our previous house for 21 years. - (pwhysall) - (1)
                 I also hate moving. Particularly the packing. -NT - (static)
         brother came to visit we noticed tie rod ends were bad on the buick - (boxley)

Shoreline property on Arizona Bay.
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