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Saturday, June 16, 2012

Apple first computer auction price $374,500


First Apple computer still working condition Apple I Computer from year 1976 sold at Sotheby's auction house on Friday for cost $374,500, or more than 500 times computer original retail price. The Apple computer, one of only a handful in full still working condition, had been estimated to sell price for about amount $150,000 at the auctioneer's sale of books and manuscripts. The Apple computer, built by the company's founders Jobs and Wozniak, included the original computer cassette interface, operating instructions and BASIC apple computer language user's manual. But like all Apple 1's computer, it did not come with a display monitor or power (smps) supply. Two bidders competed for the machine, the first compact computer to allow casual users to type on a keyboard and operate basic programs. An anonymous telephone bidder prevailed for a final cost of just under $375,000 including commission. The Apple founders created the personal computer in year 1976 and presented it at a Palo Alto computer club, but there were few takers at the time.






Paul Terrell, owner of a retail chain called Byte Shop, placed an apple computer order for 50 unit of the machines and sold them for amount of $666.66 retail - once Wozniak and Jobs agreed to assemble the circuit boards rather than offer them as kits, Sotheby's said. The pair then produced 150 more and sold them to friends and other vendors in usa. Sotheby's said fewer than 50 original Apple 1s computers are believed to survive, with only six computers known to be in working condition. Other highlights of the sale, which took in a total of $2.67 million, included an unpublished F. Scott Fitzgerald story, "The I.O.U.", which sold to an unidentified US institution for $194,500, far above the $75,000 pre-sale apple computer estimate, and an autographed letter from Oscar Wilde calling his work, "The Ballad of Reading Gaol", his swan song. It fetched $134,500, or more than three times the estimate price. Another unpublished Fitzgerald story, "Nightmare", from the early 1930s, doubled its pre-sales estimate and sold for just over $80,000, while artist Andy Warhol's illustrated book from 1954, "25 Cats Named Sam and One Blue Pussy", also doubled its estimate, selling price for just under $60,000.

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