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The Longest-Running Tech Products Still Sold

11/04/2026
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The Longest-Running Tech Products That Refuse to Die

Some products arrive, peak, and vanish within a year. But a rare few stick around for decades. These are the longest-running tech products still available for purchase today. They have outlasted countless competitors. They have survived format wars, corporate mergers, and shifting tastes. Yet you can still walk into a store or go online and buy them. That kind of staying power is almost unheard of in tech. As covered frequently on KREAblog’s technology section, the tech world moves fast. So what makes these products the exception? Let’s count them down.

11. IBM Model M Keyboard (1985–Present)

This keyboard first shipped in 1985. It is famous for its buckling spring keys. Each keystroke produces a loud, satisfying click. Typists and programmers fell in love with it immediately. Unicomp now makes the keyboard using the original tooling. So you can still buy a brand-new one nearly 40 years later. Most keyboards today feel cheap by comparison. The Model M proves that great design can outlive every trend.

10. Texas Instruments TI-84 Calculator (2004–Present)

Wait — the TI-84 dates back to 2004? Yes. But its design roots go back to the TI-81 from 1990. The calculator barely looks different from its 1990s ancestors. Schools still need them for exams. No phone or app has replaced them in classrooms. The pricing has stayed high despite its old technology. Students grumble, but they still buy them. It is one of the longest-running tech product lines in education.

9. Casio F-91W Watch (1989–Present)

This tiny digital watch costs less than a fast-food meal. Yet it has been in production since 1989. Over 100 million units have sold worldwide. Its battery lasts about seven years. Fashion designers and tech workers wear it ironically — and sincerely. However, its appeal goes beyond price. The F-91W is a masterclass in doing one thing well. It tells time. That’s it. And it does it forever.

8. ThinkPad Laptop Line (1992–Present)

The ThinkPad debuted in 1992 under a major computer company. It moved to a different manufacturer in 2005. But the red TrackPoint nub survived the transition. So did the matte black design. Business users trust this laptop line more than almost any other. Each generation updates the specs. Yet the core identity stays remarkably the same. Few laptop brands can claim over 30 years of continuous production.

7. Sony PlayStation Console Line (1994–Present)

The first PlayStation launched in 1994 in Japan. Five main generations have followed since. Each one sold tens of millions of units. The brand name never changed. Furthermore, the controller layout has barely shifted in 30 years. Most console makers have come and gone in that time. Sony’s consistency is almost stubborn. But it works. The PlayStation brand is now worth billions.

6. HP 12C Financial Calculator (1981–Present)

This might surprise you. The HP 12C first hit shelves in 1981. Financial professionals still buy it today. It uses Reverse Polish Notation, a quirky input method. Most people find it confusing at first. But bankers and accountants swear by it. The calculator costs more now than it did decades ago. HP has tried to retire it multiple times. Customers always push back. So it stays in production.

The Longest-Running Tech Products Still Sold

5. Bose QuietComfort Headphone Line (2000–Present)

The original QuietComfort headphones appeared around 2000. They were among the first noise-canceling consumer headphones. Frequent flyers adopted them quickly. The line has gone through many versions since. However, the QuietComfort name has stayed. Each version improves the noise canceling and comfort. The brand built its entire identity around this single product line. Very few headphone series last a quarter century.

4. Adobe Photoshop (1990–Present)

Photoshop launched in February 1990. It was a simple image editor for one computer platform. Today it runs on multiple systems and even browsers. The word “Photoshop” became a verb. No competitor has seriously threatened its dominance. As a result, it is the longest-running tech product in professional creative software. Photographers, designers, and meme-makers all depend on it. That’s a rare audience overlap. Over 30 years later, it still sets the standard. You can explore more creative tools on KREAblog.

3. Nintendo Game Boy Line (1989–Present, Spiritual Successors)

The original Game Boy launched in 1989. It sold over 118 million units across its versions. The hardware evolved into the DS, 3DS, and finally the Switch. But the idea never changed. Nintendo always sold a portable gaming screen you hold in your hands. That core concept is now 35 years old. Competitors tried and failed to beat it. The Switch alone has sold over 140 million units. Portability won.

2. Corning Gorilla Glass (2007–Present)

Your phone screen likely uses this product right now. Gorilla Glass debuted in 2007 on the first major smartphone. But here’s the twist. The underlying glass technology dates back to the 1960s. It sat unused for decades. Then the smartphone era arrived and gave it new life. Every major phone maker now uses some version of it. Therefore, it might be the most touched tech product on Earth. Billions of fingers tap it daily.

1. The USB Standard (1996–Present)

USB launched in 1996 as a simple connector standard. It replaced a mess of serial ports, parallel ports, and proprietary cables. Nearly 30 years later, USB is everywhere. It charges phones, connects drives, and links keyboards. The format has changed from A to B to C. But the core idea endures. No single tech standard has lasted this long with this much daily use. USB is boring. But boring things that work are the hardest to kill. That is the ultimate lesson of longest-running tech products.

Staying power in technology is rare and valuable. These products didn’t just survive — they became part of daily life. They ignored hype cycles and focused on solving real problems. As a result, they earned something money can’t buy: trust built over decades. For more stories about the technology shaping our world, visit KREAblog.

This article is for informational purposes only.

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