Apple's first computer fetches $375,000 at auction

The computer was among 175 of those sold by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak from their production in a garage


Afp September 27, 2018
An Apple-1 computer, built in 1976, is displayed during the First Bytes: Iconic Technology From the Twentieth Century, an online auction featuring vintage tech products at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California. PHOTO: AFP

SAN FRANCISCO: An Apple-1, a rare model of the first computer produced by the now-iconic tech firm, fetched $375,000 in an auction this week, according to Boston-based RR Auction.

The computer was among 175 of those sold by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak from their production in a garage in Silicon Valley in the early days of Apple in 1976 and 1977.

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The model originally went for $666.66 when it was sold by the Byte Shop computer store in Mountain View, California in the 1970s.

Jobs and Wozniak initially designed the Apple-1 as a bare circuit board to be sold as a kit and completed by electronics hobbyists, but Byte Shop owned Paul Terrell agreed to buy 50 if they were fully assembled and did not require soldering by the buyer.

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According to RR, the computer sold this week was restored to the original running condition in June and included the original Apple-1 board, a cassette interface, keyboard, and other equipment.

The selling price was far from a record, however: another Apple-1 computer went for $905,000 in 2014.

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