And you thought the prices for normal Apple systems were high enough (we kid; we kid). An old-school Apple-1 computer is up for auction via Christie's of London, and the estimate for the sale hovers between $160,000 and $240,000.
Winning bidders will receive the system itself, an original 1976 design that's in short supply today-- roughly 50 still exist out of the original lot of 200 that were designed and hand-built by Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak himself. The auction also allegedly includes the Apple-1's original packaging, instruction manuals, and a signed letter by company co-cofounder Steve Jobs himself (likely autographed in Jobs' garage, the initial manufacturing location for the Apple-1 design).
This entire setup would have cost an aspiring purchaser $666.66 back in July of 1976, although its miniscule amount of memory—eight kilobytes—wouldn't even be enough to store a single iTunes song by today's standards. An additional cassette interface that comes alongside the to-be-auctioned product would have cost an extra $75 in Apple's beginning years.
For those intending on firing up the Apple-1 for a bit of chess, you might want to save a few extra bucks in the bank account for some additional puchases. That's because the Apple-1 is a wee bit different in its design than Apple products of the present-day. For starters, there's no case, keyboard, or interface to speak of—no included monitor to connect to what's ultimately just a circuit board.
Apple's first PC was unique in that, as an assembled system, users weren't forced to actually go and solder the components onto the board themselves. However, it wasn't until the launch of the Apple-II that a keyboard was integrated into a general case design, paving the way for the more "conventional" computer look that's known today.
Christie's plans to auction the device on November 23.
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