Bangkok Post

Apple-1 sells for $671,400

- STEVE LOHR

NEW YORK: Apple’s stock price may be well down from its peaks last year, but the market for the company’s oldest computers continues to set records.

An Apple-1 computer, made in 1976, sold for a record $671,400 (20 million baht) on Saturday at an auction in Germany, including all fees and taxes, said Uwe Breker, the German auctioneer.

That surpassed the $640,000 record for an Apple-1, set in November at a sale at the same auction house in Cologne, Germany, Auction Team Breker. The fall 2012 sale was a sharp rise from the previous record price for an Apple-1 of $374,500, set in June 2012 at Sotheby’s in New York.

The high prices paid for the machines seem to be explained by the combinatio­n of scarcity, a fascinatio­n with the early history of the computer age, and the mystique of Apple and its founders, Steve Jobs and Stephen G. Wozniak — and some irrational exuberance in the prices, for a machine that can do very little and originally sold for $666 (about $2,700 in current dollars).

‘‘This really confirms the value of Apple1’s,’’ Mr Breker said.

The buyer, Mr Breker said, was a wealthy entreprene­ur from the Far East who wishes to remain anonymous.

Part of the allure of the earliest Apple machines, Mr Breker said, is not what they are but what they represent. ‘‘It is a superb symbol of the American dream,’’ he said.

‘‘You have two college dropouts from California who pursued an idea and a dream, and that dream becomes one of the most admired, successful and valuable companies in the world.’’

The anonymous buyer, who can afford to spend more than $670,000 on an old computer, seems to have enjoyed some version of the entreprene­urial dream come true as well.

The original owner of the Apple-1 on sale was Fred Hatfield, a former major league baseball player in the 1950s, who died in 1998.

 ??  ?? Dag Spicer, a senior curator at the Computer History Museum, next to an Apple-1 on display at the museum in Mountain View, Californis, on Thursday. Apple-1 computers, built in Steve Jobs’s family garage, have sold for hundreds of thousands of dollars...
Dag Spicer, a senior curator at the Computer History Museum, next to an Apple-1 on display at the museum in Mountain View, Californis, on Thursday. Apple-1 computers, built in Steve Jobs’s family garage, have sold for hundreds of thousands of dollars...

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