More Macs on the auction block
gleam
sent us this wired article which talks about
more macs on the block
an Apple II with serial number 2, and an early apple I. They
also comment about the earlier auctioned Apple which Woz
confirmed is not really the first Apple.
Maybe I can unload mine before the price drops....if I can find it in the closet under all the socks and crap.
You'd think the yobbos at La Salle could have done a tiny bit more checking into the origins of the Mac they sold - like asking the guy who built it. Ah well... what's a few facts in the face of $40K?
Hokey statistics and ancient misconceptions are no match for a good thought in your head, kid!
Try to remember that they're not Macs, they're Apple I's and II's. The Mac came in 84 and was based on Motorola 68000 while the Apple II's were based on 6502. I can't remember off the top of my head what the I was using as a processor.
(Happy owner of an IIGS and a whole crapload of programming manuals, including the real gem "Programming the 6502" from Sybex, printed '78.. also got bunches of SCSI cards, turbo card, Z80 card and whatnot..)
for only 20,000!!!! wow what a deal and I tell you what. I will throw in the old tape recorder I used for storage.
Put it up on eBay and see how much it gets. Not even a mint condition Altair goes for that kind of price.
Now the Atari Portfolio, there's a real piece of retro-geekishness.
- Ixbalam =^.^=
Smart moves by Apple, this will generate interest in Mac, and give them free exposure. I may have to donate my Apple ][ for this.
I'd donate one of my Macs, but they are all aquariums now (great Christmas gifts for my geek friends!)
It's a thankless job, but I've got a lot of Karma to burn off
I noticed that URL had "slashdot" in it:
o gy/story/20410.html
/. effect?
http://www.wired.com/news/news/slashdot/technol
Is this something Wired created for slashdot posts to protect itself from the
At our high school we were digging through our computer graveyard and found this old Apple computer that was apparently manufactured in conjunction with Bell & Howell. It looks exactly like an Apple II, but has no markings that designate its model number or anything. Anyone heard of these things, or have any info at all about it? I'm curious to know its history.
"Ahh... The net is vast..." - Maj. Motoko Kusanagi
I love how he says he'll use part of the six figure proceeds to buy a G3. :} The're not THAT expensive any more!
hitchhiker
the other day, i saw an Apple II at the thrift store, although it was probably serial number 2305820548268KCW#ER#@3, so it was probably a good thing that i didn't spend $10 on it. 'Lord knows i need more crap.
Here in at ISU they have a "computer sale" every wensday, they sell the stuff that they would be throwing away *extremely* cheap. I got an appleII+ (I wanted a gs though) for $50, and a funky looking dumb terminal for a qarter.. this isn't really relevant to anything... but whatever
_
"Subtle mind control? Why do all these HTML buttons say 'Submit' ?"
ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
(The regular Apple II's used snap on covers, so kids in classrooms could open them up, which was not good, generally)
Not good? Hell, it was invaluable! It made it practical to quickly open the case and pull the speaker wire so you could play games during BASIC class!
In the Wired article, Woz says he may have the original Apple I breadboard! Now there's a unique piece of history -- that should go to the Smithsonian. I doubt that any single comparable prototype exists for an Altair because they were motherboard systems. Even if you could find an original Altair CPU breadboard, you'd need the rest of the system, and I doubt that all of it still exists, or even that it ever existed as a single prototype. Most likely some boards were designed and produced before others, so there would be no single prototype system. (The one pictured on Radio Electronics was a mockup, I believe.)