The general malaise in the collectibles industry continued last week when one of only six known working Apple I computers sold for just US$355,000. Whilst this may seem a lot for a 40-year-old ...
BERLIN — An auctioneer says one of Apple's first computers — a functioning 1976 model — has been sold for a record 516,000 euros ($668,000). German auction house Breker said Saturday an Asian client, ...
Why is Christian Science in our name? Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The Christian Science Church, and we’ve always been transparent about that. The Church publishes the Monitor ...
A rare "Celebration" Apple-1 computer built by Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs in 1976 sold for $815,000 this week, according to MacRumors, after a bid for $1.2 million was pulled at the last minute.
Mike Grady looked at his computer and asked it if it knew any songs. After a momentary pause, the machine obliged with “Mary Had a Little Lamb.” The Logicon Corp. computer, displayed at the Los ...
A working example of one of only 200 Apple-1 computers built in the 1970s sold Wednesday for a record $905,000 at Bonhams New York's inaugural "History of Science" sale. Built by Steve Wozniak, who ...
Apple Inc AAPL fans and collectors will be excited to see an offering from fractional ownership company Rally Rd this week. Rally will offer 33,000 shares of the Apple I computer for $23 each with the ...
Auction house Sotheby's will auction an exceptionally rare Apple 1 computer - one of the first batch of machines that launched the PC era. The computer - one of just 200 - is the first ever batch of ...
NEW YORK (AP) — It’s the kind of electronic junk that piles up in basements and garages — an old computer motherboard with wires sticking out. But because it was designed and sold by two college ...
An auctioneer says one of Apple's first computers — a functioning 1976 model — has been sold for a record $668,000 US. German auction house Breker said Saturday an Asian client, who asked not to be ...
A rare 1976 Apple computer worth $200,000 was found at a rubbish dump after its owner threw it away being unaware of its value. The mystery woman dropped off a box of old electronic equipment for ...
Charles Wang sets the record straight on rumors he started Computer Associates in a Queens garage. “That’s romantic and dramatic,” says Wang, now chairman emeritus of CA. “No. We started in Manhattan” ...
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