obsolete

(adjective)

no longer in use; gone into disuse; disused or neglected (often by preference for something newer, which replaces the subject).

Related Terms

  • patent
  • distinctiveness

Examples of obsolete in the following topics:

  • Frederick Taylor

    • Although scientific management as a distinct theory or school of thought was obsolete by the 1930s, most of its themes are still important parts of industrial engineering and management today.
  • Using a Product Life Cycle Framework

    • Decline: the product becomes obsolete and its competitive disadvantage result in decline in sales and, eventually, deletion.
  • Investment in Operations

    • Supply chain optimization may include additional refinements at various stages of the product lifecycle, and new, ongoing, and obsolete items are optimized in different ways.
  • The hurdles

    • For example, a hardware store that sells drills may find it difficult to market and sell a hole-drilling service because the less expensive a drill is to buy, the more impractical and obsolete a hole-drilling service becomes.
  • Employment Levels

    • Structural unemployment may be encouraged to rise by persistent cyclical unemployment: if an economy suffers from long-lasting low aggregate demand, many of the unemployed may become disheartened and their skills (including job-searching skills) become rusty and obsolete.
  • Introduction to Understanding Waste

    • As times changed and industries refused to change, a significant number of manufacturing jobs became obsolete – and in what became a familiar pattern across numerous American industrial cities, unemployment grew, bringing crime, social unrest and racial tensions, followed by flight to the suburbs and the abandonment of downtown areas.
Subjects
  • Accounting
  • Algebra
  • Art History
  • Biology
  • Business
  • Calculus
  • Chemistry
  • Communications
  • Economics
  • Finance
  • Management
  • Marketing
  • Microbiology
  • Physics
  • Physiology
  • Political Science
  • Psychology
  • Sociology
  • Statistics
  • U.S. History
  • World History
  • Writing

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