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All known 49-year-old Apple-1 computers

apple1registry.com

156 points by elvis70 6 months ago · 43 comments

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kens 6 months ago

If you want an Apple I, there is one up for auction right now. Current bid is $109,919 but it will surely go for much more.

https://www.rrauction.com/auctions/lot-detail/35045050724601...

  • bayouborne 6 months ago

    In March of this year, an Apple-1 sold on the same site for 375k usd

    https://www.rrauction.com/auctions/lot-detail/34999140714600...

  • testing22321 6 months ago

    For that amount of money it’s incredible we aren’t seeing fakes…

    • FridayoLeary 6 months ago

      Or just reproducing it and selling it on the basis that it works exactly the same way as the original...

      I'm slightly mystified at the sums collectors items sell for. It seems intuitive to me that their prices should be some function of their inherent values, however that's calculated. It could even be many times that number but it should at least be tethered to reality.

      • testing22321 6 months ago

        At this point they’re like art or exotic and rare cars - appreciating because of their historical impact.

        Obviously the original Mona Lisa is worth a bit more than a good copy.

    • Suppafly 5 months ago

      >For that amount of money it’s incredible we aren’t seeing fakes…

      I suspect we are.

    • dasKrokodil 6 months ago

      I previously asked about how hard it would be to create a forgery and got a nice answer here:

      https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=29173562#29175946

      TLDR: it would be very hard, perhaps next to impossible to create one, and then you'd still have the issue how to convince people it's real, given that the existing ones are pretty well documented and accounted for.

kristopolous 6 months ago

Gotta be honest, if I saw this sitting next to a dumpster I'd probably think "what is this worthless circuitboard doing here." and then I'd take it to properly e-waste it only to later find out:

"That was worth how much!?"

  • kens 6 months ago

    That literally happened: a woman dropped off computer junk at an e-waste facility in Milpitas in 2015. The facility found an Apple I in the stuff and sold it for $200,000. They tried unsuccessfully to get in touch with the woman to split the money.

    https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-19665632

    • ndiddy 6 months ago

      The Apple 1 registry site says that it was likely a marketing stunt by the e-waste facility (https://www.apple1registry.com/en/theapple1.html):

      > The story of an almost-destroyed Apple-1 found in a recycling center is a bit strange. There’s no proof it's true. No picture of the Apple-1 has been published, yet the company was in the news for a long time. After gaining so much attention, many people sent old computers to them. Numerous requests for a photo or info went unanswered. No Apple-1 expert or collector was ever contacted by the recycling company.

      As far as I can tell, there's no public record of the sale, the buyer never came forward, and all the photos of the computer from news articles and stuff are stock images of other Apple 1s.

      • kristopolous 6 months ago

        Upon closer inspection I'd probably notice the "Apple Computer 1" and then think "oh cool, a replica" and put it in a box with conference swag

  • stavros 6 months ago

    How much is it worth? I couldn't find any prices on the page.

ofrzeta 6 months ago

One of them is owned ("almost verified") by Jean-Louis Gassée, former Apple exec, who went on to found Be Inc. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Louis_Gass%C3%A9e

nxobject 6 months ago

Sadly, this registry might be out of date again: entry #43 indicates it is from the now-dismantled Living Computer Museum + Labs.

https://www.apple1registry.com/en/43.html

JSR_FDED 6 months ago

What an amazing labor of love to catalog all these machines. Some of the stories behind each individual machine are amazing.

I remember when Fry's Electronics (was it Palo Alto or Sunnyvale?) had one on display.

  • nielsbot 6 months ago

    Man... tangentially, is there a coffee table book about Fry's yet? I remember in the dot com days they had a lounge pianist there as well as a cafeteria? And also, oddly, adult magazines by the check out lines.

    • glimshe 6 months ago

      I feel sad every time I think about Fry's and the death of big box electronics retail. I still long for those trips where I'd simply spend hours looking for what's new. Amazon can't deliver the same high and neither can Microcenter, the not-so-bad modern version.

      Don't get me even started about Radio Shack :'(

    • dhosek 6 months ago

      I loved all the themed locations in Southern California, although the north-Orange county one, where the theme was just “aerospace” and all they really did was put a giant Space Shuttle model in the center (Burbank’s 50s sci-fi movie theme was, I think, the best of the lot).

    • rkhassen9 6 months ago

      Would love a coffee table book of Fry's. The themes alone would make good viewing!

    • chiph 6 months ago

      The one in Austin (piano themed) met a sad end.

      Part of their old space is now being redeveloped for a MicroCenter.

    • minitoar 6 months ago

      There was a cafeteria as recently as 2018

divbzero 6 months ago

Of the 92 “verified and almost verified” Apple I computers in this registry, 67 are confirmed to be in working condition.

N19PEDL2 6 months ago

A few years ago, I attended a test powering on of #41 'Frank Anderson' at the Polytechnic University of Turin. It was a truly exciting and interesting experience.

mikeytown2 6 months ago

I don't see prices of previous auctions. What do these go for roughly?

aquova 6 months ago

I'm not sure why, but I vaguely expected Woz to have at least one

ycombinete 6 months ago

Why is “computer” not pluralised in the page title?

I thought it was a mistake in the post; but it’s the same on the page.

thenthenthen 6 months ago

I love the ‘almost verified’ as a category. This just subtly hints to the human/cultural values behind it (documentation, restoration, preservation efforts), not only the hardware or as many comments here speculate on; its value in coins.

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