📈 Legacy Technologies Ranked #51–#75 in Australia

See the Top 25

Legacy technologies are platforms and tools that have been discontinued or shut down and no longer operate. Some are completely defunct, while others remain functional but unsupported.

Australia is an Oceanian country with a population of over 27 million people.

The following list shows the legacy technologies ranked from 51st to 75th out of 80 used on websites in Australia.

RankNameMarket share
51
J2Store
Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu, India

An open-source e-commerce extension for Joomla that is no longer maintained.

FreeOpen sourceLegacy
52
qTranslate-X

A discontinued WordPress plugin used for managing dynamic multilingual content on websites.

FreeOpen sourceLegacy
53
Adobe GoLive
San Jose, California, United States

A WYSIWYG HTML editor that was discontinued in 2008.

$299Legacy
54
Foundry
Orlando, Florida, United States

A freeform framework for RapidWeaver and Stacks that was discontinued in 2024.

$99+Legacy
55
Material Design Lite
Mountain View, California, United States

A legacy user interface framework that implements Material Design components using plain CSS, JavaScript, and HTML without external dependencies.

FreeOpen sourceLegacy
56
NetObjects Fusion
Redwood City, California, United States

A discontinued web design software for Windows and Mac OS.

$163.95Legacy
57
Serif WebPlus
Sydney, Australia

A legacy WYSIWYG website builder for Microsoft Windows that was discontinued in 2016.

Legacy
58
Adobe PageMill
San Jose, California, United States

A legacy WYSIWYG HTML editor that was discontinued in favor of GoLive.

$149Legacy
59
Claris Home Page
Cupertino, California, United States

A WYSIWYG HTML editor that was discontinued in 2001.

Legacy
60
ES6 Shim

Provides compatibility shims so that legacy JavaScript engines behave as closely as possible to ECMAScript 6.

FreeOpen sourceLegacy
61
Freeway
Witney, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom

A WYSIWYG web design application for Mac OS X.

$39Legacy
62
Edgio
Phoenix, Arizona, United States

A global multi-tenant CDN that delivered web traffic for many large video streaming customers until it went bankrupt in 2024.

Legacy
63
Google Code Archive
Mountain View, California, United States

Google Code was a code hosting service for open source projects.

FreeLegacy
64
HeadJS

A JavaScript loader that loads scripts in parallel, but executes them in order.

FreeOpen sourceLegacy
65
AngularJS Material
Mountain View, California, United States

An implementation of Google's Material Design Specification (2014-2017) for AngularJS developers.

FreeOpen sourceLegacy
66
Tachyon

A deprecated script that improves the user experience of your website by prerendering pages before a user navigates to them.

FreeOpen sourceLegacy
67
Cloud.IQ
London, United Kingdom

An AI-powered marketing platform that is currently out of operation.

Legacy
68
Pocket Button
Mountain View, California, United States

Allowed users to save content to Pocket, a social bookmarking service that shut down in 2025.

FreeLegacy
69
Namo WebEditor
Korea

A legacy WYSIWYG HTML editor that was discontinued in 2011.

Legacy
70
Glitch
San Francisco, California, United States

A collaborative programming environment that was shut down after being acquired by Fastly.

Legacy
71
Kohana

A deprecated open-source PHP framework that was last updated in 2016.

FreeOpen sourceLegacy
72
Giropay
Frankfurt, Germany

A German payment method based on online banking that was discontinued on December 31, 2024.

Legacy
73
DOM4

A fully tested and covered polyfill for DOM Level 4 entries.

FreeOpen sourceLegacy
74
IBM WebSphere Homepage Builder
Armonk, New York, United States

A WYSIWYG HTML editor for Windows and Linux that was available until the mid-2000s.

Legacy
75
Sapper

An open-source Svelte framework for server-rendered and client-hydrated web applications that has been deprecated in favor of its successor, SvelteKit.

FreeOpen sourceLegacy

👉 See Also

Data is based on the analysis of 73,682 websites from Australia.
Statistics were last calculated on .
For details, see our methodology and disclaimer.