Why things don't change
legacy system
<jargon> A computer system or application program which
continues to be used because of the cost of replacing or
redesigning it and often despite its poor competitiveness and
compatibility with modern equivalents. The implication is that
the system is large, monolithic and difficult to modify.
If legacy software only runs on antiquated hardware the cost of
maintaining this may eventually outweigh the cost of replacing
both the software and hardware unless some form of emulation or
backward compatibility allows the software to run on new
hardware.