London: Apple 1, the first ready-made personal computer, is expected to sell for up to $180,000 in an auction at Sotheby’s, The Telegraph reported on Friday. The computer, consisting only of a bare motherboard, with microchips and circuitry exposed, is thought to be one of only around half a dozen working examples of Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak’s first hardware. [caption id=“attachment_345573” align=“alignleft” width=“380” caption=“Image used for representational purpose only. Reuters”]  [/caption] Some 200 Apple 1s were built in 1976 and sold at retail for $666.66 without a case, keyboard, monitor or power supply. The computer had 4 kilobytes of memory as standard and a processor running at 1 MHz. By comparison, the latest iPhone has 512 megabytes of memory, and a dual-core processor running at 800 MHz. “When Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs presented the Apple 1 Computer to the Homebrew Computer Club in 1976, it was dismissed by everyone but Paul Terrell, the owner of a chain of stores called Byte Shop,” said Sotheby’s in its catalogue for the auction, which was scheduled to take place in New York Friday. IANS
Apple 1, the first ready-made personal computer, is expected to sell for up to $180,000 in an auction at Sotheby’s, The Telegraph reported on Friday.
Advertisement
End of Article
Written by FP Archives
see more


)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
)
