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The first model of Apple computer, marketed in 1976, sold for 400,000 euros at auction

2021-11-10T10:19:58.545Z


These computers assembled by hand at Steve Jobs were at the time sold for 666.66 dollars. The working Apple-1 was sold for 400,000 euros. This first computer model ever marketed by the apple firm from 1976, consisting in particular of wood, was auctioned Tuesday in southern California. The company founded by Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs only built a total of 200 Apple-1s, all hand-assembled at Jobs, most of which sold at the time for $ 666.66. The copy auctioned by the John Moran auct


The working Apple-1 was sold for 400,000 euros.

This first computer model ever marketed by the apple firm from 1976, consisting in particular of wood, was auctioned Tuesday in southern California.

The company founded by Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs only built a total of 200 Apple-1s, all hand-assembled at Jobs, most of which sold at the time for $ 666.66.

The copy auctioned by the John Moran auction house in Monrovia, near Los Angeles, was estimated at between $ 400,000 and $ 600,000.

Only 20 computers work

A working Apple-1 was sold for more than $ 900,000 in 2014 by Bonhams.

According to expert Corey Cohen, interviewed by the Los Angeles Times newspaper, 60 Apple-1s have been identified to date but only 20 of them, including the one sold by the house of John Moran, still work.

The copy is all the more original because it has an exotic wood case, the koa, native to the Hawaiian Islands, a rarity that has earned it a place in a sale otherwise devoted to contemporary art and design. .

There are only six known examples of Apple-1 with koa housing, according to the catalog of the house of John Moran.

In 1976, the Apple-1s were among the first models of personal computers already assembled (with the components already soldered on the motherboard in particular) but they were often sold without a case or keyboard.

The copy bought at the time by a professor at Chaffey College, put on sale Tuesday, "is a bit like the holy grail for collectors of electronics and vintage computers", assures Corey Cohen.

This professor sold it in 1977 to one of his students, who kept it to this day and chose to remain anonymous.

Source: leparis

All life articles on 2021-11-10

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