A word or a phrase for “completely optimised, thoroughly researched technology”





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I am looking for a phrase or a word which can be used in the sentence:



It is rather old, but _____________________ technology.



The word or the phrase should address a technology, which is totally investigated, researched into detail, thoroughly optimised so there is nothing more to find out or improve.



Thanks










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  • 1




    The term hardened is often used for software. The analogy "battle-tested" is a stronger version of "field tested", which could also apply.
    – jimm101
    yesterday






  • 5




    I'm sorry, there is no technology matches your description. Most technologies can be improved on...However,there could be stellar technology (really good).
    – Lambie
    yesterday












  • Only simple machines fit this description.
    – Mazura
    yesterday






  • 2




    Mature tech (as suggested michael's answer) applies when there are only some minor improvements still being researched. But it doesn't rule out the possibility of major leaps that nobody's thought of yet, enabled by new materials, new design techniques, or whatever. e.g. silicon semiconductor manufacturing is a mature tech, and we think we're getting close to limits on how far we can push it (feature size), but there are still new ideas coming along that improve things and plenty of development.
    – Peter Cordes
    yesterday






  • 1




    I like the Dutch word for this: "uitontwikkeld", means something like "enddeveloped": developed until the end / as far as it can go.
    – Luc
    13 hours ago

















up vote
18
down vote

favorite












I am looking for a phrase or a word which can be used in the sentence:



It is rather old, but _____________________ technology.



The word or the phrase should address a technology, which is totally investigated, researched into detail, thoroughly optimised so there is nothing more to find out or improve.



Thanks










share|improve this question









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Kkatja is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • 1




    The term hardened is often used for software. The analogy "battle-tested" is a stronger version of "field tested", which could also apply.
    – jimm101
    yesterday






  • 5




    I'm sorry, there is no technology matches your description. Most technologies can be improved on...However,there could be stellar technology (really good).
    – Lambie
    yesterday












  • Only simple machines fit this description.
    – Mazura
    yesterday






  • 2




    Mature tech (as suggested michael's answer) applies when there are only some minor improvements still being researched. But it doesn't rule out the possibility of major leaps that nobody's thought of yet, enabled by new materials, new design techniques, or whatever. e.g. silicon semiconductor manufacturing is a mature tech, and we think we're getting close to limits on how far we can push it (feature size), but there are still new ideas coming along that improve things and plenty of development.
    – Peter Cordes
    yesterday






  • 1




    I like the Dutch word for this: "uitontwikkeld", means something like "enddeveloped": developed until the end / as far as it can go.
    – Luc
    13 hours ago













up vote
18
down vote

favorite









up vote
18
down vote

favorite











I am looking for a phrase or a word which can be used in the sentence:



It is rather old, but _____________________ technology.



The word or the phrase should address a technology, which is totally investigated, researched into detail, thoroughly optimised so there is nothing more to find out or improve.



Thanks










share|improve this question









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Kkatja is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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I am looking for a phrase or a word which can be used in the sentence:



It is rather old, but _____________________ technology.



The word or the phrase should address a technology, which is totally investigated, researched into detail, thoroughly optimised so there is nothing more to find out or improve.



Thanks







single-word-requests expressions phrase-requests vocabulary






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edited yesterday









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  • 1




    The term hardened is often used for software. The analogy "battle-tested" is a stronger version of "field tested", which could also apply.
    – jimm101
    yesterday






  • 5




    I'm sorry, there is no technology matches your description. Most technologies can be improved on...However,there could be stellar technology (really good).
    – Lambie
    yesterday












  • Only simple machines fit this description.
    – Mazura
    yesterday






  • 2




    Mature tech (as suggested michael's answer) applies when there are only some minor improvements still being researched. But it doesn't rule out the possibility of major leaps that nobody's thought of yet, enabled by new materials, new design techniques, or whatever. e.g. silicon semiconductor manufacturing is a mature tech, and we think we're getting close to limits on how far we can push it (feature size), but there are still new ideas coming along that improve things and plenty of development.
    – Peter Cordes
    yesterday






  • 1




    I like the Dutch word for this: "uitontwikkeld", means something like "enddeveloped": developed until the end / as far as it can go.
    – Luc
    13 hours ago














  • 1




    The term hardened is often used for software. The analogy "battle-tested" is a stronger version of "field tested", which could also apply.
    – jimm101
    yesterday






  • 5




    I'm sorry, there is no technology matches your description. Most technologies can be improved on...However,there could be stellar technology (really good).
    – Lambie
    yesterday












  • Only simple machines fit this description.
    – Mazura
    yesterday






  • 2




    Mature tech (as suggested michael's answer) applies when there are only some minor improvements still being researched. But it doesn't rule out the possibility of major leaps that nobody's thought of yet, enabled by new materials, new design techniques, or whatever. e.g. silicon semiconductor manufacturing is a mature tech, and we think we're getting close to limits on how far we can push it (feature size), but there are still new ideas coming along that improve things and plenty of development.
    – Peter Cordes
    yesterday






  • 1




    I like the Dutch word for this: "uitontwikkeld", means something like "enddeveloped": developed until the end / as far as it can go.
    – Luc
    13 hours ago








1




1




The term hardened is often used for software. The analogy "battle-tested" is a stronger version of "field tested", which could also apply.
– jimm101
yesterday




The term hardened is often used for software. The analogy "battle-tested" is a stronger version of "field tested", which could also apply.
– jimm101
yesterday




5




5




I'm sorry, there is no technology matches your description. Most technologies can be improved on...However,there could be stellar technology (really good).
– Lambie
yesterday






I'm sorry, there is no technology matches your description. Most technologies can be improved on...However,there could be stellar technology (really good).
– Lambie
yesterday














Only simple machines fit this description.
– Mazura
yesterday




Only simple machines fit this description.
– Mazura
yesterday




2




2




Mature tech (as suggested michael's answer) applies when there are only some minor improvements still being researched. But it doesn't rule out the possibility of major leaps that nobody's thought of yet, enabled by new materials, new design techniques, or whatever. e.g. silicon semiconductor manufacturing is a mature tech, and we think we're getting close to limits on how far we can push it (feature size), but there are still new ideas coming along that improve things and plenty of development.
– Peter Cordes
yesterday




Mature tech (as suggested michael's answer) applies when there are only some minor improvements still being researched. But it doesn't rule out the possibility of major leaps that nobody's thought of yet, enabled by new materials, new design techniques, or whatever. e.g. silicon semiconductor manufacturing is a mature tech, and we think we're getting close to limits on how far we can push it (feature size), but there are still new ideas coming along that improve things and plenty of development.
– Peter Cordes
yesterday




1




1




I like the Dutch word for this: "uitontwikkeld", means something like "enddeveloped": developed until the end / as far as it can go.
– Luc
13 hours ago




I like the Dutch word for this: "uitontwikkeld", means something like "enddeveloped": developed until the end / as far as it can go.
– Luc
13 hours ago










22 Answers
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I don't know of a technology that cannot be improved, but we often use the term mature to describe technology that's deemed developed enough to be left alone:




A mature technology is a technology that has been in use for long enough that most of its initial faults and inherent problems have been removed or reduced by further development. In some contexts, it may also refer to technology that has not seen widespread use, but whose scientific background is well understood.
Wikipedia







mature

6. No longer subject to great expansion or development. Used of an industry, market, or product.
American Heritage® Dictionary







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  • An illustrative quotation might help demonstrate the exact semantics of the term. Due to my hobbyist interests, I often hear that Cathode Ray Tubes were a mature technology. What do you think of adding something like "In the 1990s, C.R.T. television technology was a mature technology and new L.C.D. and plasma technologies were expected to displace C.R.Ts. rapidly." from Turkey and the Global Economy: Neo-Liberal Restructuring and Integration in the Post-Crisis Era by Ziya Onis and Fikret Senses?
    – Tonepoet
    9 hours ago




















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59
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You may be looking for proven.




It is rather old, but proven technology.




Collins:




proven in British



adjective
3. tried; tested



a proven method



Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © Harper Collins Publishers



proven in American



adjective
2. known to be valid, effective, or genuine



a proven method



Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010
by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.







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    tried and tested




    adjective - recognized as reliable; found to be successful



    tried-and-tested in British (ˈtraɪdəndˈtɛstɪd), tried-and-trusted
    (ˈtraɪdəndˈtrʌstɪd) or US and Canadian tried-and-true (ˈtraɪdəndˈtruː)
    adjective recognized as reliable; found to be successful



    https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/tried-and-tested




    As noted the expression varies somewhat according to location. All of the above versions would be understandable to a British person.






    share|improve this answer























    • Does "state of the art" work?
      – Ronnie Childs
      yesterday






    • 2




      No because the OP stated that it is 'old technology'. State of the art only applies to the newest developments.
      – chasly from UK
      yesterday






    • 1




      I would recommend changing the headline to tried and true, or maybe tried and trusted, while specifying which entry you checked within the quotation. Tried and tested just seems entirely redundant, and seems to skip over the "completely optimized" sentiment in favor of placing extra emphasis on the thorough research, so it doesn't seem like as good of a suggestion to place first as the others.
      – Tonepoet
      21 hours ago












    • this does not look technical, at least in the computer science way
      – cesar mak
      20 hours ago






    • 1




      I did not know that "tried and tested" is British while American speakers say "tried and true". Another language/dialect difference to add in my blue book. @Tonepoet I don't find the former redundant whatsoever, you can try something out without doing any tests on it previously.
      – Mari-Lou A
      16 hours ago




















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    Most common term I have seen repeatedly and would thus use is, well established.




    It is rather old, but well established technology




    "science can be leading edge or well established" Wiki Technology






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      I'd suggest perfected, to capture both the "fully optimized" and "fully reliable" qualities. (Which are not at all the same thing!)




      It is rather old, but perfected, technology.







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      • 2




        Welcome to EL&U! This is on its way to being an excellent answer, but it's lacking one element: supporting evidence. An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct - preferably by quoting a reference (e.g. a dictionary definition for perfected) hyperlinked to the source. You can edit your post to add this detail; for further guidance, see How to Answer. Make sure you also take the Tour :-)
        – Chappo
        yesterday












      • Good suggestion, but the sentence seems rather stilted. Maybe something like: "This technology is ancient, but has been perfected in the ..." could help?
        – hkBst
        14 hours ago


















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      All of these answers, mature, well established, proven are absolutely correct in my opinion, but have become euphemisms for "out dated". Whenever someone tries to sell me "mature" technology, I immediately think "barely usable in today's environment".



      I would then describe this as stable:




      Not likely to change or fail
      ; firmly established




      or fit for purpose:




      well equipped or well suited for its designated role or purpose







      share|improve this answer

















      • 1




        The sentence does start with It is rather old.
        – Notts90
        15 hours ago










      • +1 for stable. It properly connotes that the technology has little need to change over time.
        – jpmc26
        2 hours ago


















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      Might I suggest that the technology has been vetted?




      vet: to subject to usually expert appraisal or correction







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      • 1




        In my experience in the software industry, this is what we say. "This technology has been thoroughly vetted."
        – IchabodE
        7 hours ago


















      up vote
      2
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      I'm thinking perhaps flawless may suit the need. . .




      It is rather old, but
      flawless
      technology.






      • flawless
        adjective



        flaw·​less | ˈflȯ-ləs



        Definition of flawless



        1 : having no flaw or imperfection : PERFECT






      Otherwise consider immaculate if you prefer it instead. . .




      It is rather old, but
      immaculate
      technology.






      • immaculate
        adjective



        im·​mac·​u·​late | i-ˈma-kyə-lət



        Definition of immaculate



        2 : having or containing no flaw or error








      share|improve this answer




























        up vote
        2
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        unbeatable



        adjective UK /ʌnˈbiː.tə.bəl/, US /ʌnˈbiː.t̬ə.bəl/.
        Unable to be defeated or improved because of excellent quality.







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        • 1




          Hi kervich, I've edited your post to add formatting and a hyperlink to the dictionary definition. Your post was ok, but these extra elements are desirable in a good answer and will help attract upvotes. To further improve your post, you can edit it to add your own explanation of why you think this is the best solution (be assertive!) and include some example sentences. NB: If you use an example from Cambridge, be sure to add it within the "blockquote" formatting, so that the source is clear. :-)
          – Chappo
          21 hours ago




















        up vote
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        In the same vein as the good tried and true or mature is seasoned. Merriam-Webster gives "to make fit by experience" as one of the meanings of the transitive verb. It is used in expressions like seasoned advice or seasoned veterans or seasoned strategic planning consultants.






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          The word that first came to mind for me was robust, which a previous poster had used in describing the meaning of the word they were suggesting ("foolproof").




          robust



          1d : capable of performing without failure under a wide range of
          conditions




          • robust software







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          • Hi Chris, welcome to EL&U. This was two elements short of being an excellent answer. It had an introductory explanation, the proposed solution is useful, it was supported by a dictionary definition of the key word, and you cited your source. All that was missing was a link to the online source (preferable but not mandatory), and some formatting to improve the appearance (helps attract additional upvotes!), both of which I've added. I look forward to your future contributions - and don't forget to take the Tour :-)
            – Chappo
            2 hours ago


















          up vote
          1
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          Streamlined may fit your needs.




          It is rather old, but streamlined technology.




          adjective - designed or organized to give maximum efficiency; compact.



          https://www.dictionary.com/browse/streamlined



          I somewhat prefer this since it doesn't speak to the "newness" of the technology but it does imply that it is optimized or researched/planned in detail.






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            In a technical context, you want this definition of the word understood, which carries more weight than the way it is used colloquially:



            un·​der·​stood | ˌən-dər-ˈstu̇d



            adjective




            1. fully apprehended


            The reason is understood is meant to be complete. If it is 100%, totally investigated, researched into detail, thoroughly optimised so there is nothing more to find out or improve, in science it is referred to as understood. Examples include:




            These are all interesting mathematical properties that are relevant to the description of physical systems, but they cannot be used as a catch-all, by saying that eventually all (un-understood) physical systems will be understood in terms of non-linearity.




            Source



            And




            On the other hand, it has been found that many effects occuring in natural and man-made system of propagating waves can be best characterized and understood as parametric interactions of waves.




            Source



            In both the these examples, the understood concept is a fully studied one that can be safely used as a building block for more complicated models because there is nothing more to learn about it.






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              Foolproof could be an appropriate choice if the robustness is the concerning aspect of that. On the other side, thinking that as the best instance of its breed, the ultimate is suggested.






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                There is a common acronym for this, used in computing and engineering, which is



                COTS - "commercial off-the-shelf" - i.e. you can buy it ready made without having to do any research to invent it yourself, and without needing to understand every detail of how it works.




                It is rather old, but COTS technology.




                https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/COTS






                share|improve this answer





















                • This doesn’t address the matter of how good or how well-researched the technology is.
                  – Lawrence
                  5 hours ago


















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                Since the sentence already contains the context of "technology"...




                It is rather old, but _____________________ technology.




                An adjective like well-developed could work.



                Broadly defined, it means highly or fully developed, so it allows for the possibility that nothing is ever fully developed, so to speak (as previously suggested), and also permits the assumption that something may be...like my sixth hammer, obviously; the first five (all being the same brand, style, and weight)--'Misappropriated!'--carted off like Helen of Troy (Who could blame them?).



                But hammers, even six of them, probably don't count as "technology"...



                So, here's another example of fully developed technology found online, a video.



                Well, that is some fine-looking machinery there...but I wonder if the wire-processing people thought their technology was fully developed before the invention of touchscreens. Hmm, it's just a thought.






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                  The phrase that comes to mind immediately for me is a well oiled machine.



                  Macmillan dictionary notes that the adjective phrase describes something that "operates without problems;" Merriam-Webster uses the defining phrase "smoothly functioning."




                  The word or the phrase should address a technology, which is totally investigated, researched into detail, thoroughly optimised so there is nothing more to find out or improve.




                  "Well-oiled" indicates that everything is running optimally with no clear room for improvement and no implied efforts toward further investigation or research, but rather continuing with the great status quo. Also, with more and more machines going digital, use of this phrase would cause a mental association with older technology, but technology that is still functioning well.






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                    I think the current top two answers are probably the ones I'd use. However, depending on your context you may prefer the term exhaustive.




                    It is rather old, but exhaustive technology.




                    You might have the modify the sentence to add more context for it to make sense since the word exhaustive rarely stands on its own, but to me it conveys the idea that the technology has covered all the bases, so to speak. They've thought of everything.






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                      I would offer battle-tested



                      Often used figuratively to imply its been used hard and been put through its paces and hardships - yet still remained viable.



                      Battle tested






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                        up vote
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                        ******thoroughly vetted*******









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                        • I bet it to let it, I really don't get it!! Context is coming soon or what? Someone added that already!!
                          – Facebook
                          37 mins ago




















                        up vote
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                        There may be a place for the term de facto standard here, which states that some (technology) is, in reality, pretty much the only sane choice. This scenario naturally goes hand in hand with established, mature technologies that do the job brilliantly.



                        The hydraulic caliper disc brake is the de facto standard braking architecture in cars.






                        share|improve this answer




























                          up vote
                          -1
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                          Nobody so far has suggested commodity (noun) / commoditised (verb). Where something is so well-understood that anyone can make a new one cheaply, that won't be any better than the other options.



                          I work in the development of new technology and we often refer to things that aren't interesting to us any more as having been commoditised.



                          The Merriam Webster definition of commodity covers it under heading 3:




                          3: a good or service whose wide availability typically leads to smaller
                          profit margins and diminishes the importance of factors (such as brand
                          name) other than price







                          share|improve this answer





















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                            22 Answers
                            22






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                            22 Answers
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                            up vote
                            64
                            down vote













                            I don't know of a technology that cannot be improved, but we often use the term mature to describe technology that's deemed developed enough to be left alone:




                            A mature technology is a technology that has been in use for long enough that most of its initial faults and inherent problems have been removed or reduced by further development. In some contexts, it may also refer to technology that has not seen widespread use, but whose scientific background is well understood.
                            Wikipedia







                            mature

                            6. No longer subject to great expansion or development. Used of an industry, market, or product.
                            American Heritage® Dictionary







                            share|improve this answer























                            • An illustrative quotation might help demonstrate the exact semantics of the term. Due to my hobbyist interests, I often hear that Cathode Ray Tubes were a mature technology. What do you think of adding something like "In the 1990s, C.R.T. television technology was a mature technology and new L.C.D. and plasma technologies were expected to displace C.R.Ts. rapidly." from Turkey and the Global Economy: Neo-Liberal Restructuring and Integration in the Post-Crisis Era by Ziya Onis and Fikret Senses?
                              – Tonepoet
                              9 hours ago

















                            up vote
                            64
                            down vote













                            I don't know of a technology that cannot be improved, but we often use the term mature to describe technology that's deemed developed enough to be left alone:




                            A mature technology is a technology that has been in use for long enough that most of its initial faults and inherent problems have been removed or reduced by further development. In some contexts, it may also refer to technology that has not seen widespread use, but whose scientific background is well understood.
                            Wikipedia







                            mature

                            6. No longer subject to great expansion or development. Used of an industry, market, or product.
                            American Heritage® Dictionary







                            share|improve this answer























                            • An illustrative quotation might help demonstrate the exact semantics of the term. Due to my hobbyist interests, I often hear that Cathode Ray Tubes were a mature technology. What do you think of adding something like "In the 1990s, C.R.T. television technology was a mature technology and new L.C.D. and plasma technologies were expected to displace C.R.Ts. rapidly." from Turkey and the Global Economy: Neo-Liberal Restructuring and Integration in the Post-Crisis Era by Ziya Onis and Fikret Senses?
                              – Tonepoet
                              9 hours ago















                            up vote
                            64
                            down vote










                            up vote
                            64
                            down vote









                            I don't know of a technology that cannot be improved, but we often use the term mature to describe technology that's deemed developed enough to be left alone:




                            A mature technology is a technology that has been in use for long enough that most of its initial faults and inherent problems have been removed or reduced by further development. In some contexts, it may also refer to technology that has not seen widespread use, but whose scientific background is well understood.
                            Wikipedia







                            mature

                            6. No longer subject to great expansion or development. Used of an industry, market, or product.
                            American Heritage® Dictionary







                            share|improve this answer














                            I don't know of a technology that cannot be improved, but we often use the term mature to describe technology that's deemed developed enough to be left alone:




                            A mature technology is a technology that has been in use for long enough that most of its initial faults and inherent problems have been removed or reduced by further development. In some contexts, it may also refer to technology that has not seen widespread use, but whose scientific background is well understood.
                            Wikipedia







                            mature

                            6. No longer subject to great expansion or development. Used of an industry, market, or product.
                            American Heritage® Dictionary








                            share|improve this answer














                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer








                            edited yesterday

























                            answered yesterday









                            michael.hor257k

                            9,86921636




                            9,86921636












                            • An illustrative quotation might help demonstrate the exact semantics of the term. Due to my hobbyist interests, I often hear that Cathode Ray Tubes were a mature technology. What do you think of adding something like "In the 1990s, C.R.T. television technology was a mature technology and new L.C.D. and plasma technologies were expected to displace C.R.Ts. rapidly." from Turkey and the Global Economy: Neo-Liberal Restructuring and Integration in the Post-Crisis Era by Ziya Onis and Fikret Senses?
                              – Tonepoet
                              9 hours ago




















                            • An illustrative quotation might help demonstrate the exact semantics of the term. Due to my hobbyist interests, I often hear that Cathode Ray Tubes were a mature technology. What do you think of adding something like "In the 1990s, C.R.T. television technology was a mature technology and new L.C.D. and plasma technologies were expected to displace C.R.Ts. rapidly." from Turkey and the Global Economy: Neo-Liberal Restructuring and Integration in the Post-Crisis Era by Ziya Onis and Fikret Senses?
                              – Tonepoet
                              9 hours ago


















                            An illustrative quotation might help demonstrate the exact semantics of the term. Due to my hobbyist interests, I often hear that Cathode Ray Tubes were a mature technology. What do you think of adding something like "In the 1990s, C.R.T. television technology was a mature technology and new L.C.D. and plasma technologies were expected to displace C.R.Ts. rapidly." from Turkey and the Global Economy: Neo-Liberal Restructuring and Integration in the Post-Crisis Era by Ziya Onis and Fikret Senses?
                            – Tonepoet
                            9 hours ago






                            An illustrative quotation might help demonstrate the exact semantics of the term. Due to my hobbyist interests, I often hear that Cathode Ray Tubes were a mature technology. What do you think of adding something like "In the 1990s, C.R.T. television technology was a mature technology and new L.C.D. and plasma technologies were expected to displace C.R.Ts. rapidly." from Turkey and the Global Economy: Neo-Liberal Restructuring and Integration in the Post-Crisis Era by Ziya Onis and Fikret Senses?
                            – Tonepoet
                            9 hours ago














                            up vote
                            59
                            down vote













                            You may be looking for proven.




                            It is rather old, but proven technology.




                            Collins:




                            proven in British



                            adjective
                            3. tried; tested



                            a proven method



                            Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © Harper Collins Publishers



                            proven in American



                            adjective
                            2. known to be valid, effective, or genuine



                            a proven method



                            Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010
                            by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.







                            share|improve this answer

























                              up vote
                              59
                              down vote













                              You may be looking for proven.




                              It is rather old, but proven technology.




                              Collins:




                              proven in British



                              adjective
                              3. tried; tested



                              a proven method



                              Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © Harper Collins Publishers



                              proven in American



                              adjective
                              2. known to be valid, effective, or genuine



                              a proven method



                              Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010
                              by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.







                              share|improve this answer























                                up vote
                                59
                                down vote










                                up vote
                                59
                                down vote









                                You may be looking for proven.




                                It is rather old, but proven technology.




                                Collins:




                                proven in British



                                adjective
                                3. tried; tested



                                a proven method



                                Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © Harper Collins Publishers



                                proven in American



                                adjective
                                2. known to be valid, effective, or genuine



                                a proven method



                                Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010
                                by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.







                                share|improve this answer












                                You may be looking for proven.




                                It is rather old, but proven technology.




                                Collins:




                                proven in British



                                adjective
                                3. tried; tested



                                a proven method



                                Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © Harper Collins Publishers



                                proven in American



                                adjective
                                2. known to be valid, effective, or genuine



                                a proven method



                                Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010
                                by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.








                                share|improve this answer












                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer










                                answered yesterday









                                alwayslearning

                                24.6k53392




                                24.6k53392






















                                    up vote
                                    22
                                    down vote













                                    tried and tested




                                    adjective - recognized as reliable; found to be successful



                                    tried-and-tested in British (ˈtraɪdəndˈtɛstɪd), tried-and-trusted
                                    (ˈtraɪdəndˈtrʌstɪd) or US and Canadian tried-and-true (ˈtraɪdəndˈtruː)
                                    adjective recognized as reliable; found to be successful



                                    https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/tried-and-tested




                                    As noted the expression varies somewhat according to location. All of the above versions would be understandable to a British person.






                                    share|improve this answer























                                    • Does "state of the art" work?
                                      – Ronnie Childs
                                      yesterday






                                    • 2




                                      No because the OP stated that it is 'old technology'. State of the art only applies to the newest developments.
                                      – chasly from UK
                                      yesterday






                                    • 1




                                      I would recommend changing the headline to tried and true, or maybe tried and trusted, while specifying which entry you checked within the quotation. Tried and tested just seems entirely redundant, and seems to skip over the "completely optimized" sentiment in favor of placing extra emphasis on the thorough research, so it doesn't seem like as good of a suggestion to place first as the others.
                                      – Tonepoet
                                      21 hours ago












                                    • this does not look technical, at least in the computer science way
                                      – cesar mak
                                      20 hours ago






                                    • 1




                                      I did not know that "tried and tested" is British while American speakers say "tried and true". Another language/dialect difference to add in my blue book. @Tonepoet I don't find the former redundant whatsoever, you can try something out without doing any tests on it previously.
                                      – Mari-Lou A
                                      16 hours ago

















                                    up vote
                                    22
                                    down vote













                                    tried and tested




                                    adjective - recognized as reliable; found to be successful



                                    tried-and-tested in British (ˈtraɪdəndˈtɛstɪd), tried-and-trusted
                                    (ˈtraɪdəndˈtrʌstɪd) or US and Canadian tried-and-true (ˈtraɪdəndˈtruː)
                                    adjective recognized as reliable; found to be successful



                                    https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/tried-and-tested




                                    As noted the expression varies somewhat according to location. All of the above versions would be understandable to a British person.






                                    share|improve this answer























                                    • Does "state of the art" work?
                                      – Ronnie Childs
                                      yesterday






                                    • 2




                                      No because the OP stated that it is 'old technology'. State of the art only applies to the newest developments.
                                      – chasly from UK
                                      yesterday






                                    • 1




                                      I would recommend changing the headline to tried and true, or maybe tried and trusted, while specifying which entry you checked within the quotation. Tried and tested just seems entirely redundant, and seems to skip over the "completely optimized" sentiment in favor of placing extra emphasis on the thorough research, so it doesn't seem like as good of a suggestion to place first as the others.
                                      – Tonepoet
                                      21 hours ago












                                    • this does not look technical, at least in the computer science way
                                      – cesar mak
                                      20 hours ago






                                    • 1




                                      I did not know that "tried and tested" is British while American speakers say "tried and true". Another language/dialect difference to add in my blue book. @Tonepoet I don't find the former redundant whatsoever, you can try something out without doing any tests on it previously.
                                      – Mari-Lou A
                                      16 hours ago















                                    up vote
                                    22
                                    down vote










                                    up vote
                                    22
                                    down vote









                                    tried and tested




                                    adjective - recognized as reliable; found to be successful



                                    tried-and-tested in British (ˈtraɪdəndˈtɛstɪd), tried-and-trusted
                                    (ˈtraɪdəndˈtrʌstɪd) or US and Canadian tried-and-true (ˈtraɪdəndˈtruː)
                                    adjective recognized as reliable; found to be successful



                                    https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/tried-and-tested




                                    As noted the expression varies somewhat according to location. All of the above versions would be understandable to a British person.






                                    share|improve this answer














                                    tried and tested




                                    adjective - recognized as reliable; found to be successful



                                    tried-and-tested in British (ˈtraɪdəndˈtɛstɪd), tried-and-trusted
                                    (ˈtraɪdəndˈtrʌstɪd) or US and Canadian tried-and-true (ˈtraɪdəndˈtruː)
                                    adjective recognized as reliable; found to be successful



                                    https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/tried-and-tested




                                    As noted the expression varies somewhat according to location. All of the above versions would be understandable to a British person.







                                    share|improve this answer














                                    share|improve this answer



                                    share|improve this answer








                                    edited 23 hours ago









                                    Mazura

                                    8,05932049




                                    8,05932049










                                    answered yesterday









                                    chasly from UK

                                    22.3k12967




                                    22.3k12967












                                    • Does "state of the art" work?
                                      – Ronnie Childs
                                      yesterday






                                    • 2




                                      No because the OP stated that it is 'old technology'. State of the art only applies to the newest developments.
                                      – chasly from UK
                                      yesterday






                                    • 1




                                      I would recommend changing the headline to tried and true, or maybe tried and trusted, while specifying which entry you checked within the quotation. Tried and tested just seems entirely redundant, and seems to skip over the "completely optimized" sentiment in favor of placing extra emphasis on the thorough research, so it doesn't seem like as good of a suggestion to place first as the others.
                                      – Tonepoet
                                      21 hours ago












                                    • this does not look technical, at least in the computer science way
                                      – cesar mak
                                      20 hours ago






                                    • 1




                                      I did not know that "tried and tested" is British while American speakers say "tried and true". Another language/dialect difference to add in my blue book. @Tonepoet I don't find the former redundant whatsoever, you can try something out without doing any tests on it previously.
                                      – Mari-Lou A
                                      16 hours ago




















                                    • Does "state of the art" work?
                                      – Ronnie Childs
                                      yesterday






                                    • 2




                                      No because the OP stated that it is 'old technology'. State of the art only applies to the newest developments.
                                      – chasly from UK
                                      yesterday






                                    • 1




                                      I would recommend changing the headline to tried and true, or maybe tried and trusted, while specifying which entry you checked within the quotation. Tried and tested just seems entirely redundant, and seems to skip over the "completely optimized" sentiment in favor of placing extra emphasis on the thorough research, so it doesn't seem like as good of a suggestion to place first as the others.
                                      – Tonepoet
                                      21 hours ago












                                    • this does not look technical, at least in the computer science way
                                      – cesar mak
                                      20 hours ago






                                    • 1




                                      I did not know that "tried and tested" is British while American speakers say "tried and true". Another language/dialect difference to add in my blue book. @Tonepoet I don't find the former redundant whatsoever, you can try something out without doing any tests on it previously.
                                      – Mari-Lou A
                                      16 hours ago


















                                    Does "state of the art" work?
                                    – Ronnie Childs
                                    yesterday




                                    Does "state of the art" work?
                                    – Ronnie Childs
                                    yesterday




                                    2




                                    2




                                    No because the OP stated that it is 'old technology'. State of the art only applies to the newest developments.
                                    – chasly from UK
                                    yesterday




                                    No because the OP stated that it is 'old technology'. State of the art only applies to the newest developments.
                                    – chasly from UK
                                    yesterday




                                    1




                                    1




                                    I would recommend changing the headline to tried and true, or maybe tried and trusted, while specifying which entry you checked within the quotation. Tried and tested just seems entirely redundant, and seems to skip over the "completely optimized" sentiment in favor of placing extra emphasis on the thorough research, so it doesn't seem like as good of a suggestion to place first as the others.
                                    – Tonepoet
                                    21 hours ago






                                    I would recommend changing the headline to tried and true, or maybe tried and trusted, while specifying which entry you checked within the quotation. Tried and tested just seems entirely redundant, and seems to skip over the "completely optimized" sentiment in favor of placing extra emphasis on the thorough research, so it doesn't seem like as good of a suggestion to place first as the others.
                                    – Tonepoet
                                    21 hours ago














                                    this does not look technical, at least in the computer science way
                                    – cesar mak
                                    20 hours ago




                                    this does not look technical, at least in the computer science way
                                    – cesar mak
                                    20 hours ago




                                    1




                                    1




                                    I did not know that "tried and tested" is British while American speakers say "tried and true". Another language/dialect difference to add in my blue book. @Tonepoet I don't find the former redundant whatsoever, you can try something out without doing any tests on it previously.
                                    – Mari-Lou A
                                    16 hours ago






                                    I did not know that "tried and tested" is British while American speakers say "tried and true". Another language/dialect difference to add in my blue book. @Tonepoet I don't find the former redundant whatsoever, you can try something out without doing any tests on it previously.
                                    – Mari-Lou A
                                    16 hours ago












                                    up vote
                                    20
                                    down vote













                                    Most common term I have seen repeatedly and would thus use is, well established.




                                    It is rather old, but well established technology




                                    "science can be leading edge or well established" Wiki Technology






                                    share|improve this answer



























                                      up vote
                                      20
                                      down vote













                                      Most common term I have seen repeatedly and would thus use is, well established.




                                      It is rather old, but well established technology




                                      "science can be leading edge or well established" Wiki Technology






                                      share|improve this answer

























                                        up vote
                                        20
                                        down vote










                                        up vote
                                        20
                                        down vote









                                        Most common term I have seen repeatedly and would thus use is, well established.




                                        It is rather old, but well established technology




                                        "science can be leading edge or well established" Wiki Technology






                                        share|improve this answer














                                        Most common term I have seen repeatedly and would thus use is, well established.




                                        It is rather old, but well established technology




                                        "science can be leading edge or well established" Wiki Technology







                                        share|improve this answer














                                        share|improve this answer



                                        share|improve this answer








                                        edited yesterday

























                                        answered yesterday









                                        KJO

                                        98910




                                        98910






















                                            up vote
                                            10
                                            down vote













                                            I'd suggest perfected, to capture both the "fully optimized" and "fully reliable" qualities. (Which are not at all the same thing!)




                                            It is rather old, but perfected, technology.







                                            share|improve this answer










                                            New contributor




                                            dgould is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                            Check out our Code of Conduct.














                                            • 2




                                              Welcome to EL&U! This is on its way to being an excellent answer, but it's lacking one element: supporting evidence. An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct - preferably by quoting a reference (e.g. a dictionary definition for perfected) hyperlinked to the source. You can edit your post to add this detail; for further guidance, see How to Answer. Make sure you also take the Tour :-)
                                              – Chappo
                                              yesterday












                                            • Good suggestion, but the sentence seems rather stilted. Maybe something like: "This technology is ancient, but has been perfected in the ..." could help?
                                              – hkBst
                                              14 hours ago















                                            up vote
                                            10
                                            down vote













                                            I'd suggest perfected, to capture both the "fully optimized" and "fully reliable" qualities. (Which are not at all the same thing!)




                                            It is rather old, but perfected, technology.







                                            share|improve this answer










                                            New contributor




                                            dgould is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                            Check out our Code of Conduct.














                                            • 2




                                              Welcome to EL&U! This is on its way to being an excellent answer, but it's lacking one element: supporting evidence. An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct - preferably by quoting a reference (e.g. a dictionary definition for perfected) hyperlinked to the source. You can edit your post to add this detail; for further guidance, see How to Answer. Make sure you also take the Tour :-)
                                              – Chappo
                                              yesterday












                                            • Good suggestion, but the sentence seems rather stilted. Maybe something like: "This technology is ancient, but has been perfected in the ..." could help?
                                              – hkBst
                                              14 hours ago













                                            up vote
                                            10
                                            down vote










                                            up vote
                                            10
                                            down vote









                                            I'd suggest perfected, to capture both the "fully optimized" and "fully reliable" qualities. (Which are not at all the same thing!)




                                            It is rather old, but perfected, technology.







                                            share|improve this answer










                                            New contributor




                                            dgould is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                            Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                            I'd suggest perfected, to capture both the "fully optimized" and "fully reliable" qualities. (Which are not at all the same thing!)




                                            It is rather old, but perfected, technology.








                                            share|improve this answer










                                            New contributor




                                            dgould is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                            Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                            share|improve this answer



                                            share|improve this answer








                                            edited yesterday





















                                            New contributor




                                            dgould is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                            Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                            answered yesterday









                                            dgould

                                            1013




                                            1013




                                            New contributor




                                            dgould is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                            Check out our Code of Conduct.





                                            New contributor





                                            dgould is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                            Check out our Code of Conduct.






                                            dgould is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                            Check out our Code of Conduct.








                                            • 2




                                              Welcome to EL&U! This is on its way to being an excellent answer, but it's lacking one element: supporting evidence. An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct - preferably by quoting a reference (e.g. a dictionary definition for perfected) hyperlinked to the source. You can edit your post to add this detail; for further guidance, see How to Answer. Make sure you also take the Tour :-)
                                              – Chappo
                                              yesterday












                                            • Good suggestion, but the sentence seems rather stilted. Maybe something like: "This technology is ancient, but has been perfected in the ..." could help?
                                              – hkBst
                                              14 hours ago














                                            • 2




                                              Welcome to EL&U! This is on its way to being an excellent answer, but it's lacking one element: supporting evidence. An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct - preferably by quoting a reference (e.g. a dictionary definition for perfected) hyperlinked to the source. You can edit your post to add this detail; for further guidance, see How to Answer. Make sure you also take the Tour :-)
                                              – Chappo
                                              yesterday












                                            • Good suggestion, but the sentence seems rather stilted. Maybe something like: "This technology is ancient, but has been perfected in the ..." could help?
                                              – hkBst
                                              14 hours ago








                                            2




                                            2




                                            Welcome to EL&U! This is on its way to being an excellent answer, but it's lacking one element: supporting evidence. An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct - preferably by quoting a reference (e.g. a dictionary definition for perfected) hyperlinked to the source. You can edit your post to add this detail; for further guidance, see How to Answer. Make sure you also take the Tour :-)
                                            – Chappo
                                            yesterday






                                            Welcome to EL&U! This is on its way to being an excellent answer, but it's lacking one element: supporting evidence. An answer on this site is expected to be authoritative, detailed, and explain why it is correct - preferably by quoting a reference (e.g. a dictionary definition for perfected) hyperlinked to the source. You can edit your post to add this detail; for further guidance, see How to Answer. Make sure you also take the Tour :-)
                                            – Chappo
                                            yesterday














                                            Good suggestion, but the sentence seems rather stilted. Maybe something like: "This technology is ancient, but has been perfected in the ..." could help?
                                            – hkBst
                                            14 hours ago




                                            Good suggestion, but the sentence seems rather stilted. Maybe something like: "This technology is ancient, but has been perfected in the ..." could help?
                                            – hkBst
                                            14 hours ago










                                            up vote
                                            6
                                            down vote













                                            All of these answers, mature, well established, proven are absolutely correct in my opinion, but have become euphemisms for "out dated". Whenever someone tries to sell me "mature" technology, I immediately think "barely usable in today's environment".



                                            I would then describe this as stable:




                                            Not likely to change or fail
                                            ; firmly established




                                            or fit for purpose:




                                            well equipped or well suited for its designated role or purpose







                                            share|improve this answer

















                                            • 1




                                              The sentence does start with It is rather old.
                                              – Notts90
                                              15 hours ago










                                            • +1 for stable. It properly connotes that the technology has little need to change over time.
                                              – jpmc26
                                              2 hours ago















                                            up vote
                                            6
                                            down vote













                                            All of these answers, mature, well established, proven are absolutely correct in my opinion, but have become euphemisms for "out dated". Whenever someone tries to sell me "mature" technology, I immediately think "barely usable in today's environment".



                                            I would then describe this as stable:




                                            Not likely to change or fail
                                            ; firmly established




                                            or fit for purpose:




                                            well equipped or well suited for its designated role or purpose







                                            share|improve this answer

















                                            • 1




                                              The sentence does start with It is rather old.
                                              – Notts90
                                              15 hours ago










                                            • +1 for stable. It properly connotes that the technology has little need to change over time.
                                              – jpmc26
                                              2 hours ago













                                            up vote
                                            6
                                            down vote










                                            up vote
                                            6
                                            down vote









                                            All of these answers, mature, well established, proven are absolutely correct in my opinion, but have become euphemisms for "out dated". Whenever someone tries to sell me "mature" technology, I immediately think "barely usable in today's environment".



                                            I would then describe this as stable:




                                            Not likely to change or fail
                                            ; firmly established




                                            or fit for purpose:




                                            well equipped or well suited for its designated role or purpose







                                            share|improve this answer












                                            All of these answers, mature, well established, proven are absolutely correct in my opinion, but have become euphemisms for "out dated". Whenever someone tries to sell me "mature" technology, I immediately think "barely usable in today's environment".



                                            I would then describe this as stable:




                                            Not likely to change or fail
                                            ; firmly established




                                            or fit for purpose:




                                            well equipped or well suited for its designated role or purpose








                                            share|improve this answer












                                            share|improve this answer



                                            share|improve this answer










                                            answered yesterday









                                            Michael J.

                                            1,932514




                                            1,932514








                                            • 1




                                              The sentence does start with It is rather old.
                                              – Notts90
                                              15 hours ago










                                            • +1 for stable. It properly connotes that the technology has little need to change over time.
                                              – jpmc26
                                              2 hours ago














                                            • 1




                                              The sentence does start with It is rather old.
                                              – Notts90
                                              15 hours ago










                                            • +1 for stable. It properly connotes that the technology has little need to change over time.
                                              – jpmc26
                                              2 hours ago








                                            1




                                            1




                                            The sentence does start with It is rather old.
                                            – Notts90
                                            15 hours ago




                                            The sentence does start with It is rather old.
                                            – Notts90
                                            15 hours ago












                                            +1 for stable. It properly connotes that the technology has little need to change over time.
                                            – jpmc26
                                            2 hours ago




                                            +1 for stable. It properly connotes that the technology has little need to change over time.
                                            – jpmc26
                                            2 hours ago










                                            up vote
                                            6
                                            down vote













                                            Might I suggest that the technology has been vetted?




                                            vet: to subject to usually expert appraisal or correction







                                            share|improve this answer

















                                            • 1




                                              In my experience in the software industry, this is what we say. "This technology has been thoroughly vetted."
                                              – IchabodE
                                              7 hours ago















                                            up vote
                                            6
                                            down vote













                                            Might I suggest that the technology has been vetted?




                                            vet: to subject to usually expert appraisal or correction







                                            share|improve this answer

















                                            • 1




                                              In my experience in the software industry, this is what we say. "This technology has been thoroughly vetted."
                                              – IchabodE
                                              7 hours ago













                                            up vote
                                            6
                                            down vote










                                            up vote
                                            6
                                            down vote









                                            Might I suggest that the technology has been vetted?




                                            vet: to subject to usually expert appraisal or correction







                                            share|improve this answer












                                            Might I suggest that the technology has been vetted?




                                            vet: to subject to usually expert appraisal or correction








                                            share|improve this answer












                                            share|improve this answer



                                            share|improve this answer










                                            answered 23 hours ago









                                            Michael W.

                                            2974




                                            2974








                                            • 1




                                              In my experience in the software industry, this is what we say. "This technology has been thoroughly vetted."
                                              – IchabodE
                                              7 hours ago














                                            • 1




                                              In my experience in the software industry, this is what we say. "This technology has been thoroughly vetted."
                                              – IchabodE
                                              7 hours ago








                                            1




                                            1




                                            In my experience in the software industry, this is what we say. "This technology has been thoroughly vetted."
                                            – IchabodE
                                            7 hours ago




                                            In my experience in the software industry, this is what we say. "This technology has been thoroughly vetted."
                                            – IchabodE
                                            7 hours ago










                                            up vote
                                            2
                                            down vote













                                            I'm thinking perhaps flawless may suit the need. . .




                                            It is rather old, but
                                            flawless
                                            technology.






                                            • flawless
                                              adjective



                                              flaw·​less | ˈflȯ-ləs



                                              Definition of flawless



                                              1 : having no flaw or imperfection : PERFECT






                                            Otherwise consider immaculate if you prefer it instead. . .




                                            It is rather old, but
                                            immaculate
                                            technology.






                                            • immaculate
                                              adjective



                                              im·​mac·​u·​late | i-ˈma-kyə-lət



                                              Definition of immaculate



                                              2 : having or containing no flaw or error








                                            share|improve this answer

























                                              up vote
                                              2
                                              down vote













                                              I'm thinking perhaps flawless may suit the need. . .




                                              It is rather old, but
                                              flawless
                                              technology.






                                              • flawless
                                                adjective



                                                flaw·​less | ˈflȯ-ləs



                                                Definition of flawless



                                                1 : having no flaw or imperfection : PERFECT






                                              Otherwise consider immaculate if you prefer it instead. . .




                                              It is rather old, but
                                              immaculate
                                              technology.






                                              • immaculate
                                                adjective



                                                im·​mac·​u·​late | i-ˈma-kyə-lət



                                                Definition of immaculate



                                                2 : having or containing no flaw or error








                                              share|improve this answer























                                                up vote
                                                2
                                                down vote










                                                up vote
                                                2
                                                down vote









                                                I'm thinking perhaps flawless may suit the need. . .




                                                It is rather old, but
                                                flawless
                                                technology.






                                                • flawless
                                                  adjective



                                                  flaw·​less | ˈflȯ-ləs



                                                  Definition of flawless



                                                  1 : having no flaw or imperfection : PERFECT






                                                Otherwise consider immaculate if you prefer it instead. . .




                                                It is rather old, but
                                                immaculate
                                                technology.






                                                • immaculate
                                                  adjective



                                                  im·​mac·​u·​late | i-ˈma-kyə-lət



                                                  Definition of immaculate



                                                  2 : having or containing no flaw or error








                                                share|improve this answer












                                                I'm thinking perhaps flawless may suit the need. . .




                                                It is rather old, but
                                                flawless
                                                technology.






                                                • flawless
                                                  adjective



                                                  flaw·​less | ˈflȯ-ləs



                                                  Definition of flawless



                                                  1 : having no flaw or imperfection : PERFECT






                                                Otherwise consider immaculate if you prefer it instead. . .




                                                It is rather old, but
                                                immaculate
                                                technology.






                                                • immaculate
                                                  adjective



                                                  im·​mac·​u·​late | i-ˈma-kyə-lət



                                                  Definition of immaculate



                                                  2 : having or containing no flaw or error









                                                share|improve this answer












                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer










                                                answered 22 hours ago









                                                Facebook

                                                141129




                                                141129






















                                                    up vote
                                                    2
                                                    down vote














                                                    unbeatable



                                                    adjective UK /ʌnˈbiː.tə.bəl/, US /ʌnˈbiː.t̬ə.bəl/.
                                                    Unable to be defeated or improved because of excellent quality.







                                                    share|improve this answer










                                                    New contributor




                                                    kervich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                                                    • 1




                                                      Hi kervich, I've edited your post to add formatting and a hyperlink to the dictionary definition. Your post was ok, but these extra elements are desirable in a good answer and will help attract upvotes. To further improve your post, you can edit it to add your own explanation of why you think this is the best solution (be assertive!) and include some example sentences. NB: If you use an example from Cambridge, be sure to add it within the "blockquote" formatting, so that the source is clear. :-)
                                                      – Chappo
                                                      21 hours ago

















                                                    up vote
                                                    2
                                                    down vote














                                                    unbeatable



                                                    adjective UK /ʌnˈbiː.tə.bəl/, US /ʌnˈbiː.t̬ə.bəl/.
                                                    Unable to be defeated or improved because of excellent quality.







                                                    share|improve this answer










                                                    New contributor




                                                    kervich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                    Check out our Code of Conduct.














                                                    • 1




                                                      Hi kervich, I've edited your post to add formatting and a hyperlink to the dictionary definition. Your post was ok, but these extra elements are desirable in a good answer and will help attract upvotes. To further improve your post, you can edit it to add your own explanation of why you think this is the best solution (be assertive!) and include some example sentences. NB: If you use an example from Cambridge, be sure to add it within the "blockquote" formatting, so that the source is clear. :-)
                                                      – Chappo
                                                      21 hours ago















                                                    up vote
                                                    2
                                                    down vote










                                                    up vote
                                                    2
                                                    down vote










                                                    unbeatable



                                                    adjective UK /ʌnˈbiː.tə.bəl/, US /ʌnˈbiː.t̬ə.bəl/.
                                                    Unable to be defeated or improved because of excellent quality.







                                                    share|improve this answer










                                                    New contributor




                                                    kervich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                    Check out our Code of Conduct.










                                                    unbeatable



                                                    adjective UK /ʌnˈbiː.tə.bəl/, US /ʌnˈbiː.t̬ə.bəl/.
                                                    Unable to be defeated or improved because of excellent quality.








                                                    share|improve this answer










                                                    New contributor




                                                    kervich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                    Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                    share|improve this answer








                                                    edited 21 hours ago









                                                    Chappo

                                                    2,35131224




                                                    2,35131224






                                                    New contributor




                                                    kervich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                                                    answered 23 hours ago









                                                    kervich

                                                    1291




                                                    1291




                                                    New contributor




                                                    kervich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                                                    New contributor





                                                    kervich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                    Check out our Code of Conduct.






                                                    kervich is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                    Check out our Code of Conduct.








                                                    • 1




                                                      Hi kervich, I've edited your post to add formatting and a hyperlink to the dictionary definition. Your post was ok, but these extra elements are desirable in a good answer and will help attract upvotes. To further improve your post, you can edit it to add your own explanation of why you think this is the best solution (be assertive!) and include some example sentences. NB: If you use an example from Cambridge, be sure to add it within the "blockquote" formatting, so that the source is clear. :-)
                                                      – Chappo
                                                      21 hours ago
















                                                    • 1




                                                      Hi kervich, I've edited your post to add formatting and a hyperlink to the dictionary definition. Your post was ok, but these extra elements are desirable in a good answer and will help attract upvotes. To further improve your post, you can edit it to add your own explanation of why you think this is the best solution (be assertive!) and include some example sentences. NB: If you use an example from Cambridge, be sure to add it within the "blockquote" formatting, so that the source is clear. :-)
                                                      – Chappo
                                                      21 hours ago










                                                    1




                                                    1




                                                    Hi kervich, I've edited your post to add formatting and a hyperlink to the dictionary definition. Your post was ok, but these extra elements are desirable in a good answer and will help attract upvotes. To further improve your post, you can edit it to add your own explanation of why you think this is the best solution (be assertive!) and include some example sentences. NB: If you use an example from Cambridge, be sure to add it within the "blockquote" formatting, so that the source is clear. :-)
                                                    – Chappo
                                                    21 hours ago






                                                    Hi kervich, I've edited your post to add formatting and a hyperlink to the dictionary definition. Your post was ok, but these extra elements are desirable in a good answer and will help attract upvotes. To further improve your post, you can edit it to add your own explanation of why you think this is the best solution (be assertive!) and include some example sentences. NB: If you use an example from Cambridge, be sure to add it within the "blockquote" formatting, so that the source is clear. :-)
                                                    – Chappo
                                                    21 hours ago












                                                    up vote
                                                    2
                                                    down vote













                                                    In the same vein as the good tried and true or mature is seasoned. Merriam-Webster gives "to make fit by experience" as one of the meanings of the transitive verb. It is used in expressions like seasoned advice or seasoned veterans or seasoned strategic planning consultants.






                                                    share|improve this answer

























                                                      up vote
                                                      2
                                                      down vote













                                                      In the same vein as the good tried and true or mature is seasoned. Merriam-Webster gives "to make fit by experience" as one of the meanings of the transitive verb. It is used in expressions like seasoned advice or seasoned veterans or seasoned strategic planning consultants.






                                                      share|improve this answer























                                                        up vote
                                                        2
                                                        down vote










                                                        up vote
                                                        2
                                                        down vote









                                                        In the same vein as the good tried and true or mature is seasoned. Merriam-Webster gives "to make fit by experience" as one of the meanings of the transitive verb. It is used in expressions like seasoned advice or seasoned veterans or seasoned strategic planning consultants.






                                                        share|improve this answer












                                                        In the same vein as the good tried and true or mature is seasoned. Merriam-Webster gives "to make fit by experience" as one of the meanings of the transitive verb. It is used in expressions like seasoned advice or seasoned veterans or seasoned strategic planning consultants.







                                                        share|improve this answer












                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                        share|improve this answer










                                                        answered 8 hours ago









                                                        Peter A. Schneider

                                                        1,579515




                                                        1,579515






















                                                            up vote
                                                            2
                                                            down vote













                                                            The word that first came to mind for me was robust, which a previous poster had used in describing the meaning of the word they were suggesting ("foolproof").




                                                            robust



                                                            1d : capable of performing without failure under a wide range of
                                                            conditions




                                                            • robust software







                                                            share|improve this answer










                                                            New contributor




                                                            Chris Hardwick is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                            Check out our Code of Conduct.


















                                                            • Hi Chris, welcome to EL&U. This was two elements short of being an excellent answer. It had an introductory explanation, the proposed solution is useful, it was supported by a dictionary definition of the key word, and you cited your source. All that was missing was a link to the online source (preferable but not mandatory), and some formatting to improve the appearance (helps attract additional upvotes!), both of which I've added. I look forward to your future contributions - and don't forget to take the Tour :-)
                                                              – Chappo
                                                              2 hours ago















                                                            up vote
                                                            2
                                                            down vote













                                                            The word that first came to mind for me was robust, which a previous poster had used in describing the meaning of the word they were suggesting ("foolproof").




                                                            robust



                                                            1d : capable of performing without failure under a wide range of
                                                            conditions




                                                            • robust software







                                                            share|improve this answer










                                                            New contributor




                                                            Chris Hardwick is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                            Check out our Code of Conduct.


















                                                            • Hi Chris, welcome to EL&U. This was two elements short of being an excellent answer. It had an introductory explanation, the proposed solution is useful, it was supported by a dictionary definition of the key word, and you cited your source. All that was missing was a link to the online source (preferable but not mandatory), and some formatting to improve the appearance (helps attract additional upvotes!), both of which I've added. I look forward to your future contributions - and don't forget to take the Tour :-)
                                                              – Chappo
                                                              2 hours ago













                                                            up vote
                                                            2
                                                            down vote










                                                            up vote
                                                            2
                                                            down vote









                                                            The word that first came to mind for me was robust, which a previous poster had used in describing the meaning of the word they were suggesting ("foolproof").




                                                            robust



                                                            1d : capable of performing without failure under a wide range of
                                                            conditions




                                                            • robust software







                                                            share|improve this answer










                                                            New contributor




                                                            Chris Hardwick is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                            Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                                            The word that first came to mind for me was robust, which a previous poster had used in describing the meaning of the word they were suggesting ("foolproof").




                                                            robust



                                                            1d : capable of performing without failure under a wide range of
                                                            conditions




                                                            • robust software








                                                            share|improve this answer










                                                            New contributor




                                                            Chris Hardwick is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                            Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                                            share|improve this answer



                                                            share|improve this answer








                                                            edited 2 hours ago









                                                            Chappo

                                                            2,35131224




                                                            2,35131224






                                                            New contributor




                                                            Chris Hardwick is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                            Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                                            answered 4 hours ago









                                                            Chris Hardwick

                                                            211




                                                            211




                                                            New contributor




                                                            Chris Hardwick is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                            Check out our Code of Conduct.





                                                            New contributor





                                                            Chris Hardwick is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                            Check out our Code of Conduct.






                                                            Chris Hardwick is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                            Check out our Code of Conduct.












                                                            • Hi Chris, welcome to EL&U. This was two elements short of being an excellent answer. It had an introductory explanation, the proposed solution is useful, it was supported by a dictionary definition of the key word, and you cited your source. All that was missing was a link to the online source (preferable but not mandatory), and some formatting to improve the appearance (helps attract additional upvotes!), both of which I've added. I look forward to your future contributions - and don't forget to take the Tour :-)
                                                              – Chappo
                                                              2 hours ago


















                                                            • Hi Chris, welcome to EL&U. This was two elements short of being an excellent answer. It had an introductory explanation, the proposed solution is useful, it was supported by a dictionary definition of the key word, and you cited your source. All that was missing was a link to the online source (preferable but not mandatory), and some formatting to improve the appearance (helps attract additional upvotes!), both of which I've added. I look forward to your future contributions - and don't forget to take the Tour :-)
                                                              – Chappo
                                                              2 hours ago
















                                                            Hi Chris, welcome to EL&U. This was two elements short of being an excellent answer. It had an introductory explanation, the proposed solution is useful, it was supported by a dictionary definition of the key word, and you cited your source. All that was missing was a link to the online source (preferable but not mandatory), and some formatting to improve the appearance (helps attract additional upvotes!), both of which I've added. I look forward to your future contributions - and don't forget to take the Tour :-)
                                                            – Chappo
                                                            2 hours ago




                                                            Hi Chris, welcome to EL&U. This was two elements short of being an excellent answer. It had an introductory explanation, the proposed solution is useful, it was supported by a dictionary definition of the key word, and you cited your source. All that was missing was a link to the online source (preferable but not mandatory), and some formatting to improve the appearance (helps attract additional upvotes!), both of which I've added. I look forward to your future contributions - and don't forget to take the Tour :-)
                                                            – Chappo
                                                            2 hours ago










                                                            up vote
                                                            1
                                                            down vote













                                                            Streamlined may fit your needs.




                                                            It is rather old, but streamlined technology.




                                                            adjective - designed or organized to give maximum efficiency; compact.



                                                            https://www.dictionary.com/browse/streamlined



                                                            I somewhat prefer this since it doesn't speak to the "newness" of the technology but it does imply that it is optimized or researched/planned in detail.






                                                            share|improve this answer



























                                                              up vote
                                                              1
                                                              down vote













                                                              Streamlined may fit your needs.




                                                              It is rather old, but streamlined technology.




                                                              adjective - designed or organized to give maximum efficiency; compact.



                                                              https://www.dictionary.com/browse/streamlined



                                                              I somewhat prefer this since it doesn't speak to the "newness" of the technology but it does imply that it is optimized or researched/planned in detail.






                                                              share|improve this answer

























                                                                up vote
                                                                1
                                                                down vote










                                                                up vote
                                                                1
                                                                down vote









                                                                Streamlined may fit your needs.




                                                                It is rather old, but streamlined technology.




                                                                adjective - designed or organized to give maximum efficiency; compact.



                                                                https://www.dictionary.com/browse/streamlined



                                                                I somewhat prefer this since it doesn't speak to the "newness" of the technology but it does imply that it is optimized or researched/planned in detail.






                                                                share|improve this answer














                                                                Streamlined may fit your needs.




                                                                It is rather old, but streamlined technology.




                                                                adjective - designed or organized to give maximum efficiency; compact.



                                                                https://www.dictionary.com/browse/streamlined



                                                                I somewhat prefer this since it doesn't speak to the "newness" of the technology but it does imply that it is optimized or researched/planned in detail.







                                                                share|improve this answer














                                                                share|improve this answer



                                                                share|improve this answer








                                                                edited yesterday

























                                                                answered yesterday









                                                                NeatoBandito

                                                                294




                                                                294






















                                                                    up vote
                                                                    0
                                                                    down vote













                                                                    In a technical context, you want this definition of the word understood, which carries more weight than the way it is used colloquially:



                                                                    un·​der·​stood | ˌən-dər-ˈstu̇d



                                                                    adjective




                                                                    1. fully apprehended


                                                                    The reason is understood is meant to be complete. If it is 100%, totally investigated, researched into detail, thoroughly optimised so there is nothing more to find out or improve, in science it is referred to as understood. Examples include:




                                                                    These are all interesting mathematical properties that are relevant to the description of physical systems, but they cannot be used as a catch-all, by saying that eventually all (un-understood) physical systems will be understood in terms of non-linearity.




                                                                    Source



                                                                    And




                                                                    On the other hand, it has been found that many effects occuring in natural and man-made system of propagating waves can be best characterized and understood as parametric interactions of waves.




                                                                    Source



                                                                    In both the these examples, the understood concept is a fully studied one that can be safely used as a building block for more complicated models because there is nothing more to learn about it.






                                                                    share|improve this answer

























                                                                      up vote
                                                                      0
                                                                      down vote













                                                                      In a technical context, you want this definition of the word understood, which carries more weight than the way it is used colloquially:



                                                                      un·​der·​stood | ˌən-dər-ˈstu̇d



                                                                      adjective




                                                                      1. fully apprehended


                                                                      The reason is understood is meant to be complete. If it is 100%, totally investigated, researched into detail, thoroughly optimised so there is nothing more to find out or improve, in science it is referred to as understood. Examples include:




                                                                      These are all interesting mathematical properties that are relevant to the description of physical systems, but they cannot be used as a catch-all, by saying that eventually all (un-understood) physical systems will be understood in terms of non-linearity.




                                                                      Source



                                                                      And




                                                                      On the other hand, it has been found that many effects occuring in natural and man-made system of propagating waves can be best characterized and understood as parametric interactions of waves.




                                                                      Source



                                                                      In both the these examples, the understood concept is a fully studied one that can be safely used as a building block for more complicated models because there is nothing more to learn about it.






                                                                      share|improve this answer























                                                                        up vote
                                                                        0
                                                                        down vote










                                                                        up vote
                                                                        0
                                                                        down vote









                                                                        In a technical context, you want this definition of the word understood, which carries more weight than the way it is used colloquially:



                                                                        un·​der·​stood | ˌən-dər-ˈstu̇d



                                                                        adjective




                                                                        1. fully apprehended


                                                                        The reason is understood is meant to be complete. If it is 100%, totally investigated, researched into detail, thoroughly optimised so there is nothing more to find out or improve, in science it is referred to as understood. Examples include:




                                                                        These are all interesting mathematical properties that are relevant to the description of physical systems, but they cannot be used as a catch-all, by saying that eventually all (un-understood) physical systems will be understood in terms of non-linearity.




                                                                        Source



                                                                        And




                                                                        On the other hand, it has been found that many effects occuring in natural and man-made system of propagating waves can be best characterized and understood as parametric interactions of waves.




                                                                        Source



                                                                        In both the these examples, the understood concept is a fully studied one that can be safely used as a building block for more complicated models because there is nothing more to learn about it.






                                                                        share|improve this answer












                                                                        In a technical context, you want this definition of the word understood, which carries more weight than the way it is used colloquially:



                                                                        un·​der·​stood | ˌən-dər-ˈstu̇d



                                                                        adjective




                                                                        1. fully apprehended


                                                                        The reason is understood is meant to be complete. If it is 100%, totally investigated, researched into detail, thoroughly optimised so there is nothing more to find out or improve, in science it is referred to as understood. Examples include:




                                                                        These are all interesting mathematical properties that are relevant to the description of physical systems, but they cannot be used as a catch-all, by saying that eventually all (un-understood) physical systems will be understood in terms of non-linearity.




                                                                        Source



                                                                        And




                                                                        On the other hand, it has been found that many effects occuring in natural and man-made system of propagating waves can be best characterized and understood as parametric interactions of waves.




                                                                        Source



                                                                        In both the these examples, the understood concept is a fully studied one that can be safely used as a building block for more complicated models because there is nothing more to learn about it.







                                                                        share|improve this answer












                                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                                        share|improve this answer










                                                                        answered 22 hours ago









                                                                        user1717828

                                                                        2,5361126




                                                                        2,5361126






















                                                                            up vote
                                                                            0
                                                                            down vote













                                                                            Foolproof could be an appropriate choice if the robustness is the concerning aspect of that. On the other side, thinking that as the best instance of its breed, the ultimate is suggested.






                                                                            share|improve this answer

























                                                                              up vote
                                                                              0
                                                                              down vote













                                                                              Foolproof could be an appropriate choice if the robustness is the concerning aspect of that. On the other side, thinking that as the best instance of its breed, the ultimate is suggested.






                                                                              share|improve this answer























                                                                                up vote
                                                                                0
                                                                                down vote










                                                                                up vote
                                                                                0
                                                                                down vote









                                                                                Foolproof could be an appropriate choice if the robustness is the concerning aspect of that. On the other side, thinking that as the best instance of its breed, the ultimate is suggested.






                                                                                share|improve this answer












                                                                                Foolproof could be an appropriate choice if the robustness is the concerning aspect of that. On the other side, thinking that as the best instance of its breed, the ultimate is suggested.







                                                                                share|improve this answer












                                                                                share|improve this answer



                                                                                share|improve this answer










                                                                                answered 15 hours ago









                                                                                Eilia

                                                                                3,310103067




                                                                                3,310103067






















                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                    0
                                                                                    down vote













                                                                                    There is a common acronym for this, used in computing and engineering, which is



                                                                                    COTS - "commercial off-the-shelf" - i.e. you can buy it ready made without having to do any research to invent it yourself, and without needing to understand every detail of how it works.




                                                                                    It is rather old, but COTS technology.




                                                                                    https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/COTS






                                                                                    share|improve this answer





















                                                                                    • This doesn’t address the matter of how good or how well-researched the technology is.
                                                                                      – Lawrence
                                                                                      5 hours ago















                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                    0
                                                                                    down vote













                                                                                    There is a common acronym for this, used in computing and engineering, which is



                                                                                    COTS - "commercial off-the-shelf" - i.e. you can buy it ready made without having to do any research to invent it yourself, and without needing to understand every detail of how it works.




                                                                                    It is rather old, but COTS technology.




                                                                                    https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/COTS






                                                                                    share|improve this answer





















                                                                                    • This doesn’t address the matter of how good or how well-researched the technology is.
                                                                                      – Lawrence
                                                                                      5 hours ago













                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                    0
                                                                                    down vote










                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                    0
                                                                                    down vote









                                                                                    There is a common acronym for this, used in computing and engineering, which is



                                                                                    COTS - "commercial off-the-shelf" - i.e. you can buy it ready made without having to do any research to invent it yourself, and without needing to understand every detail of how it works.




                                                                                    It is rather old, but COTS technology.




                                                                                    https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/COTS






                                                                                    share|improve this answer












                                                                                    There is a common acronym for this, used in computing and engineering, which is



                                                                                    COTS - "commercial off-the-shelf" - i.e. you can buy it ready made without having to do any research to invent it yourself, and without needing to understand every detail of how it works.




                                                                                    It is rather old, but COTS technology.




                                                                                    https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/COTS







                                                                                    share|improve this answer












                                                                                    share|improve this answer



                                                                                    share|improve this answer










                                                                                    answered 11 hours ago









                                                                                    alephzero

                                                                                    3,32211016




                                                                                    3,32211016












                                                                                    • This doesn’t address the matter of how good or how well-researched the technology is.
                                                                                      – Lawrence
                                                                                      5 hours ago


















                                                                                    • This doesn’t address the matter of how good or how well-researched the technology is.
                                                                                      – Lawrence
                                                                                      5 hours ago
















                                                                                    This doesn’t address the matter of how good or how well-researched the technology is.
                                                                                    – Lawrence
                                                                                    5 hours ago




                                                                                    This doesn’t address the matter of how good or how well-researched the technology is.
                                                                                    – Lawrence
                                                                                    5 hours ago










                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                    0
                                                                                    down vote













                                                                                    Since the sentence already contains the context of "technology"...




                                                                                    It is rather old, but _____________________ technology.




                                                                                    An adjective like well-developed could work.



                                                                                    Broadly defined, it means highly or fully developed, so it allows for the possibility that nothing is ever fully developed, so to speak (as previously suggested), and also permits the assumption that something may be...like my sixth hammer, obviously; the first five (all being the same brand, style, and weight)--'Misappropriated!'--carted off like Helen of Troy (Who could blame them?).



                                                                                    But hammers, even six of them, probably don't count as "technology"...



                                                                                    So, here's another example of fully developed technology found online, a video.



                                                                                    Well, that is some fine-looking machinery there...but I wonder if the wire-processing people thought their technology was fully developed before the invention of touchscreens. Hmm, it's just a thought.






                                                                                    share|improve this answer



























                                                                                      up vote
                                                                                      0
                                                                                      down vote













                                                                                      Since the sentence already contains the context of "technology"...




                                                                                      It is rather old, but _____________________ technology.




                                                                                      An adjective like well-developed could work.



                                                                                      Broadly defined, it means highly or fully developed, so it allows for the possibility that nothing is ever fully developed, so to speak (as previously suggested), and also permits the assumption that something may be...like my sixth hammer, obviously; the first five (all being the same brand, style, and weight)--'Misappropriated!'--carted off like Helen of Troy (Who could blame them?).



                                                                                      But hammers, even six of them, probably don't count as "technology"...



                                                                                      So, here's another example of fully developed technology found online, a video.



                                                                                      Well, that is some fine-looking machinery there...but I wonder if the wire-processing people thought their technology was fully developed before the invention of touchscreens. Hmm, it's just a thought.






                                                                                      share|improve this answer

























                                                                                        up vote
                                                                                        0
                                                                                        down vote










                                                                                        up vote
                                                                                        0
                                                                                        down vote









                                                                                        Since the sentence already contains the context of "technology"...




                                                                                        It is rather old, but _____________________ technology.




                                                                                        An adjective like well-developed could work.



                                                                                        Broadly defined, it means highly or fully developed, so it allows for the possibility that nothing is ever fully developed, so to speak (as previously suggested), and also permits the assumption that something may be...like my sixth hammer, obviously; the first five (all being the same brand, style, and weight)--'Misappropriated!'--carted off like Helen of Troy (Who could blame them?).



                                                                                        But hammers, even six of them, probably don't count as "technology"...



                                                                                        So, here's another example of fully developed technology found online, a video.



                                                                                        Well, that is some fine-looking machinery there...but I wonder if the wire-processing people thought their technology was fully developed before the invention of touchscreens. Hmm, it's just a thought.






                                                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                                                        Since the sentence already contains the context of "technology"...




                                                                                        It is rather old, but _____________________ technology.




                                                                                        An adjective like well-developed could work.



                                                                                        Broadly defined, it means highly or fully developed, so it allows for the possibility that nothing is ever fully developed, so to speak (as previously suggested), and also permits the assumption that something may be...like my sixth hammer, obviously; the first five (all being the same brand, style, and weight)--'Misappropriated!'--carted off like Helen of Troy (Who could blame them?).



                                                                                        But hammers, even six of them, probably don't count as "technology"...



                                                                                        So, here's another example of fully developed technology found online, a video.



                                                                                        Well, that is some fine-looking machinery there...but I wonder if the wire-processing people thought their technology was fully developed before the invention of touchscreens. Hmm, it's just a thought.







                                                                                        share|improve this answer














                                                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                                                        share|improve this answer








                                                                                        edited 5 hours ago

























                                                                                        answered 6 hours ago









                                                                                        KannE

                                                                                        798114




                                                                                        798114






















                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                            0
                                                                                            down vote













                                                                                            The phrase that comes to mind immediately for me is a well oiled machine.



                                                                                            Macmillan dictionary notes that the adjective phrase describes something that "operates without problems;" Merriam-Webster uses the defining phrase "smoothly functioning."




                                                                                            The word or the phrase should address a technology, which is totally investigated, researched into detail, thoroughly optimised so there is nothing more to find out or improve.




                                                                                            "Well-oiled" indicates that everything is running optimally with no clear room for improvement and no implied efforts toward further investigation or research, but rather continuing with the great status quo. Also, with more and more machines going digital, use of this phrase would cause a mental association with older technology, but technology that is still functioning well.






                                                                                            share|improve this answer



























                                                                                              up vote
                                                                                              0
                                                                                              down vote













                                                                                              The phrase that comes to mind immediately for me is a well oiled machine.



                                                                                              Macmillan dictionary notes that the adjective phrase describes something that "operates without problems;" Merriam-Webster uses the defining phrase "smoothly functioning."




                                                                                              The word or the phrase should address a technology, which is totally investigated, researched into detail, thoroughly optimised so there is nothing more to find out or improve.




                                                                                              "Well-oiled" indicates that everything is running optimally with no clear room for improvement and no implied efforts toward further investigation or research, but rather continuing with the great status quo. Also, with more and more machines going digital, use of this phrase would cause a mental association with older technology, but technology that is still functioning well.






                                                                                              share|improve this answer

























                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                0
                                                                                                down vote










                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                0
                                                                                                down vote









                                                                                                The phrase that comes to mind immediately for me is a well oiled machine.



                                                                                                Macmillan dictionary notes that the adjective phrase describes something that "operates without problems;" Merriam-Webster uses the defining phrase "smoothly functioning."




                                                                                                The word or the phrase should address a technology, which is totally investigated, researched into detail, thoroughly optimised so there is nothing more to find out or improve.




                                                                                                "Well-oiled" indicates that everything is running optimally with no clear room for improvement and no implied efforts toward further investigation or research, but rather continuing with the great status quo. Also, with more and more machines going digital, use of this phrase would cause a mental association with older technology, but technology that is still functioning well.






                                                                                                share|improve this answer














                                                                                                The phrase that comes to mind immediately for me is a well oiled machine.



                                                                                                Macmillan dictionary notes that the adjective phrase describes something that "operates without problems;" Merriam-Webster uses the defining phrase "smoothly functioning."




                                                                                                The word or the phrase should address a technology, which is totally investigated, researched into detail, thoroughly optimised so there is nothing more to find out or improve.




                                                                                                "Well-oiled" indicates that everything is running optimally with no clear room for improvement and no implied efforts toward further investigation or research, but rather continuing with the great status quo. Also, with more and more machines going digital, use of this phrase would cause a mental association with older technology, but technology that is still functioning well.







                                                                                                share|improve this answer














                                                                                                share|improve this answer



                                                                                                share|improve this answer








                                                                                                edited 5 hours ago

























                                                                                                answered yesterday









                                                                                                WBT

                                                                                                2,64321332




                                                                                                2,64321332






















                                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                                    0
                                                                                                    down vote













                                                                                                    I think the current top two answers are probably the ones I'd use. However, depending on your context you may prefer the term exhaustive.




                                                                                                    It is rather old, but exhaustive technology.




                                                                                                    You might have the modify the sentence to add more context for it to make sense since the word exhaustive rarely stands on its own, but to me it conveys the idea that the technology has covered all the bases, so to speak. They've thought of everything.






                                                                                                    share|improve this answer

























                                                                                                      up vote
                                                                                                      0
                                                                                                      down vote













                                                                                                      I think the current top two answers are probably the ones I'd use. However, depending on your context you may prefer the term exhaustive.




                                                                                                      It is rather old, but exhaustive technology.




                                                                                                      You might have the modify the sentence to add more context for it to make sense since the word exhaustive rarely stands on its own, but to me it conveys the idea that the technology has covered all the bases, so to speak. They've thought of everything.






                                                                                                      share|improve this answer























                                                                                                        up vote
                                                                                                        0
                                                                                                        down vote










                                                                                                        up vote
                                                                                                        0
                                                                                                        down vote









                                                                                                        I think the current top two answers are probably the ones I'd use. However, depending on your context you may prefer the term exhaustive.




                                                                                                        It is rather old, but exhaustive technology.




                                                                                                        You might have the modify the sentence to add more context for it to make sense since the word exhaustive rarely stands on its own, but to me it conveys the idea that the technology has covered all the bases, so to speak. They've thought of everything.






                                                                                                        share|improve this answer












                                                                                                        I think the current top two answers are probably the ones I'd use. However, depending on your context you may prefer the term exhaustive.




                                                                                                        It is rather old, but exhaustive technology.




                                                                                                        You might have the modify the sentence to add more context for it to make sense since the word exhaustive rarely stands on its own, but to me it conveys the idea that the technology has covered all the bases, so to speak. They've thought of everything.







                                                                                                        share|improve this answer












                                                                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                                                                        share|improve this answer










                                                                                                        answered 5 hours ago









                                                                                                        Phlucious

                                                                                                        2313




                                                                                                        2313






















                                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                                            0
                                                                                                            down vote













                                                                                                            I would offer battle-tested



                                                                                                            Often used figuratively to imply its been used hard and been put through its paces and hardships - yet still remained viable.



                                                                                                            Battle tested






                                                                                                            share|improve this answer

























                                                                                                              up vote
                                                                                                              0
                                                                                                              down vote













                                                                                                              I would offer battle-tested



                                                                                                              Often used figuratively to imply its been used hard and been put through its paces and hardships - yet still remained viable.



                                                                                                              Battle tested






                                                                                                              share|improve this answer























                                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                                0
                                                                                                                down vote










                                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                                0
                                                                                                                down vote









                                                                                                                I would offer battle-tested



                                                                                                                Often used figuratively to imply its been used hard and been put through its paces and hardships - yet still remained viable.



                                                                                                                Battle tested






                                                                                                                share|improve this answer












                                                                                                                I would offer battle-tested



                                                                                                                Often used figuratively to imply its been used hard and been put through its paces and hardships - yet still remained viable.



                                                                                                                Battle tested







                                                                                                                share|improve this answer












                                                                                                                share|improve this answer



                                                                                                                share|improve this answer










                                                                                                                answered 1 hour ago









                                                                                                                RemarkLima

                                                                                                                1,4921915




                                                                                                                1,4921915






















                                                                                                                    up vote
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                                                                                                                    • I bet it to let it, I really don't get it!! Context is coming soon or what? Someone added that already!!
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                                                                                                                      37 mins ago

















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                                                                                                                    • I bet it to let it, I really don't get it!! Context is coming soon or what? Someone added that already!!
                                                                                                                      – Facebook
                                                                                                                      37 mins ago















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                                                                                                                    answered 38 mins ago









                                                                                                                    Deb

                                                                                                                    1




                                                                                                                    1




                                                                                                                    New contributor




                                                                                                                    Deb is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                                                                                                                    New contributor





                                                                                                                    Deb is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                                                                                                                    Deb is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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                                                                                                                    • I bet it to let it, I really don't get it!! Context is coming soon or what? Someone added that already!!
                                                                                                                      – Facebook
                                                                                                                      37 mins ago




















                                                                                                                    • I bet it to let it, I really don't get it!! Context is coming soon or what? Someone added that already!!
                                                                                                                      – Facebook
                                                                                                                      37 mins ago


















                                                                                                                    I bet it to let it, I really don't get it!! Context is coming soon or what? Someone added that already!!
                                                                                                                    – Facebook
                                                                                                                    37 mins ago






                                                                                                                    I bet it to let it, I really don't get it!! Context is coming soon or what? Someone added that already!!
                                                                                                                    – Facebook
                                                                                                                    37 mins ago












                                                                                                                    up vote
                                                                                                                    -1
                                                                                                                    down vote













                                                                                                                    There may be a place for the term de facto standard here, which states that some (technology) is, in reality, pretty much the only sane choice. This scenario naturally goes hand in hand with established, mature technologies that do the job brilliantly.



                                                                                                                    The hydraulic caliper disc brake is the de facto standard braking architecture in cars.






                                                                                                                    share|improve this answer

























                                                                                                                      up vote
                                                                                                                      -1
                                                                                                                      down vote













                                                                                                                      There may be a place for the term de facto standard here, which states that some (technology) is, in reality, pretty much the only sane choice. This scenario naturally goes hand in hand with established, mature technologies that do the job brilliantly.



                                                                                                                      The hydraulic caliper disc brake is the de facto standard braking architecture in cars.






                                                                                                                      share|improve this answer























                                                                                                                        up vote
                                                                                                                        -1
                                                                                                                        down vote










                                                                                                                        up vote
                                                                                                                        -1
                                                                                                                        down vote









                                                                                                                        There may be a place for the term de facto standard here, which states that some (technology) is, in reality, pretty much the only sane choice. This scenario naturally goes hand in hand with established, mature technologies that do the job brilliantly.



                                                                                                                        The hydraulic caliper disc brake is the de facto standard braking architecture in cars.






                                                                                                                        share|improve this answer












                                                                                                                        There may be a place for the term de facto standard here, which states that some (technology) is, in reality, pretty much the only sane choice. This scenario naturally goes hand in hand with established, mature technologies that do the job brilliantly.



                                                                                                                        The hydraulic caliper disc brake is the de facto standard braking architecture in cars.







                                                                                                                        share|improve this answer












                                                                                                                        share|improve this answer



                                                                                                                        share|improve this answer










                                                                                                                        answered 16 hours ago









                                                                                                                        Robert Frost

                                                                                                                        1397




                                                                                                                        1397






















                                                                                                                            up vote
                                                                                                                            -1
                                                                                                                            down vote













                                                                                                                            Nobody so far has suggested commodity (noun) / commoditised (verb). Where something is so well-understood that anyone can make a new one cheaply, that won't be any better than the other options.



                                                                                                                            I work in the development of new technology and we often refer to things that aren't interesting to us any more as having been commoditised.



                                                                                                                            The Merriam Webster definition of commodity covers it under heading 3:




                                                                                                                            3: a good or service whose wide availability typically leads to smaller
                                                                                                                            profit margins and diminishes the importance of factors (such as brand
                                                                                                                            name) other than price







                                                                                                                            share|improve this answer

























                                                                                                                              up vote
                                                                                                                              -1
                                                                                                                              down vote













                                                                                                                              Nobody so far has suggested commodity (noun) / commoditised (verb). Where something is so well-understood that anyone can make a new one cheaply, that won't be any better than the other options.



                                                                                                                              I work in the development of new technology and we often refer to things that aren't interesting to us any more as having been commoditised.



                                                                                                                              The Merriam Webster definition of commodity covers it under heading 3:




                                                                                                                              3: a good or service whose wide availability typically leads to smaller
                                                                                                                              profit margins and diminishes the importance of factors (such as brand
                                                                                                                              name) other than price







                                                                                                                              share|improve this answer























                                                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                                                -1
                                                                                                                                down vote










                                                                                                                                up vote
                                                                                                                                -1
                                                                                                                                down vote









                                                                                                                                Nobody so far has suggested commodity (noun) / commoditised (verb). Where something is so well-understood that anyone can make a new one cheaply, that won't be any better than the other options.



                                                                                                                                I work in the development of new technology and we often refer to things that aren't interesting to us any more as having been commoditised.



                                                                                                                                The Merriam Webster definition of commodity covers it under heading 3:




                                                                                                                                3: a good or service whose wide availability typically leads to smaller
                                                                                                                                profit margins and diminishes the importance of factors (such as brand
                                                                                                                                name) other than price







                                                                                                                                share|improve this answer












                                                                                                                                Nobody so far has suggested commodity (noun) / commoditised (verb). Where something is so well-understood that anyone can make a new one cheaply, that won't be any better than the other options.



                                                                                                                                I work in the development of new technology and we often refer to things that aren't interesting to us any more as having been commoditised.



                                                                                                                                The Merriam Webster definition of commodity covers it under heading 3:




                                                                                                                                3: a good or service whose wide availability typically leads to smaller
                                                                                                                                profit margins and diminishes the importance of factors (such as brand
                                                                                                                                name) other than price








                                                                                                                                share|improve this answer












                                                                                                                                share|improve this answer



                                                                                                                                share|improve this answer










                                                                                                                                answered 8 hours ago









                                                                                                                                Vicky

                                                                                                                                24218




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