That looks far too modern
Usually vintage is triggered on something that is at least 10 years old, but you miss that computers don't measure the time in human years
Human-years and computer-years are in log2 relation, and since "vintage" is a human concept ... well you can measure the equivalent "vintage factor" applied to computers.
1 human-year, is 2 computer-years
2 human-years, are 4 computer-years
3 human-years, are 8 computer-years
4 human-years, are 16 computer-years
5 human-years, are 32 computer-years
6 human-years, are 64 computer-years
7 human-years, are 128 computer-years
8 human-years, are 256 computer-years
9 human-years, are 512 computer-years
10 human-years, are 1024 computer-years
11 human-years, are 2048 computer-years
12 human-years, are 4096 computer-years
13 human-years, are 8192 computer-years
...
20 human-years, are 1M computer-years
21 human-years, are 2M computer-years
22 human-years, are 4M computer-years
23 human-years, are 8M computer-years
24 human-years, are 16M computer-years
25 human-years, are 32M computer-years
26 human-years, are 64M computer-years
27 human-years, are 128M computer-years
28 human-years, are 256M computer-years
29 human-years, are 512M computer-years
30 human-years, are 1G computer-years
31 human-years, are 2G computer-years
32 human-years, are 4G computer-years
Therefore everything that is older than four human-years is "computer-vintage"
CorollaryMesozoic era, 66 million human-years ago
Everything in computer science that is older than 26 human-years is ... "computer-jurassic" as well as a fossil of the Mesozoic era
Notehow to calculate log2(x)
log2(x) = log10(x)/log10(2) = ln(x)/ln(2)