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Rare Apple I ‘Celebration’ model fetches $815k in auction, falling short of $1m estimates
9 to 5 Mac ^ | August 25, 2016 | By Chance Miller

Posted on 08/26/2016 6:24:32 PM PDT by Swordmaker


Earlier this summer, we reported on a “Celebration Edition” Apple I that would be going up for auction. Initial estimates pegged a value of over $1 million for the computer, but the auction today came to a close with a final selling price of $815,000. 10 percent of the proceeds from the Charitybuzz auction will benefit the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society.

Near the end of the auction, the Apple I reached a peak of $1.2 million, but the final bid was apparently cancelled at the very last second, giving the device a final sale price of $815,000 with 39 bids.

The “Celebration” Apple I model was unique in that it featured a blank “green” PCB board, suggesting that it was not part of the two known production runs of the Apple I. This means that it was potentially built before the production runs, perhaps part of a pre-production test. Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak confirmed himself that Apple never sold an Apple I with a blank PCB board, while historian Corey Cohen called this Apple I one of the “most unique” units he’d ever seen. This particular Apple I is believed to have been manufactured sometime during the summer of 1976.

Apple-related auctions have long garnered huge amounts on Charitybuzz. Earlier this year, an auction for lunch with Tim Cook raised $515,000. Previously, Cook auctions have pulled in $200,000 in 2015$330,001 in 2014, and $610,000 in 2013. Other Apple executives have also offered up lunch meetings, including Eddy CueApple Music exec Bozoma Saint John, and Beats Music’s Ian Rogers. Apple also offered up a campus tour last year.

10 percent of the auction price from the Apple I listing will benefit The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society to help support LLS research, patient services, advocacy, public and professional education, and community services. More information about the Apple I that brought in $815,000 can be seen in the video below:



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Computers/Internet
KEYWORDS: apple1; auction; macpinglist
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To: Swordmaker
Let's face it...it's been 30 years since I used the original Mac floppies. I've also had CD's and DVD's since day one, and am beginning to discover "problem disks" that won't play. I'm a retired, pragmatic BScEE and have a healthy respect for the frailty of technology.

BTW, over at storagecraft.com they say the following:

Magnetic data (audio tapes) 10-20 years
Nintendo cartridge Up to 10 years
Floppy disk 10-20 years
CDs and DVDs 5-10 unrecorded, 2-5 recorded
Blu-Ray Not certain, probably over 2-5 recorded
M-Disc 1,000 years (theoretically)
Hard disk 3-5 years
Flash storage 5-10 years or more (depends on write cycles)

41 posted on 08/28/2016 3:13:34 PM PDT by Scooter100
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To: CodeToad

I’m no great lover of MS, given that in the early 1990s, NDS was able to provide features that AD-2012 still can’t perform.

And it’s not the best product that often wins in technology, but the best marketed. Unfortunate but true.

Once managers have moved their busines systems to “Microsoft in the cloud,” it will be very diffiuclt to recover it.

Mark


42 posted on 08/28/2016 7:13:15 PM PDT by MarkL (Do I really look like a guy with a plan?)
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