Relic in a sentence as a noun

The RSA handshake is a relic of the 1990s.

There's enough alternatives now to make that kind of assumption a relic of the '90s and 00's.

As such, the only thing they've "fixed" is new relic, by making it report what is actually happening.

The 24 fps speed is a relic from the stone age of cinema, back when technology simply could not cope with higher frame rates.

Promising project but the New relic comparison is misguided.

It's almost certainly "accidental" and a relic of some indexing or something that Sharepoint is doing to the documents.

I live in Seattle, and everything around here feels like it's falling apart - you walk around and there's the distinct feeling that you're walking through a relic... something from another era, now disused and slowly decaying.

And BBEdit -- an old Mac text editor which often gets ignored these days as an unfashionable relic -- just loaded up a 24M, 181,000-line MySQL dump and is having no perceptible speed issues either scrolling the file or letting me insert new text on its first screen, even with syntax coloring enabled.

All right, here is how I feel about vim:If when you say vim you mean the antiquated relic, the impossibly-steep-learning-curve editor, the maddening modal machine, the most discouraging interface, which infuriates experienced users, confounds new users, and yea, literally takes the mouse from your hands and sets it on fire; if you mean the editor that takes every other editor and stomps them into the floor, shouting all the while, "I am better than you!

Relic definitions

noun

an antiquity that has survived from the distant past

noun

something of sentimental value

See also: keepsake souvenir token