Published on Jun 25, 2013
The owner of one of the first Apple computers ever built in 1976 tells why he has finally decided to part with the iconic machine. Read more...
Ted Perry, a retired school psychologist, is expected to make a fortune when it goes up for sale at Christie's next month. Ted started using his Apple 1 computer over three decades ago - although the vintage computer has more recently been kept stashed away in a cardboard box at his home near Sacramento, California.
The green piece of plastic covered with a copper-coloured labyrinth of memory chips was one of the first 25 computer elements designed by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak in a California garage and was originally sold for $666.66.
About 200 were made but most have disappeared or been discarded, with only around 30 to 50 still believed to be in existence.
Mr Perry, 70, acquired the computer as a second-hand item he saw advertised in 1979. He paid nothing for it; it was a swap with the owner.
Bidding for the Apple 1 computer starts at $300,000 (£194,000) but it is expected to make $500,000 (£323,000) when it goes up for sale next month.
Vintage Apple products have become especially hot items since the death of Steve Jobs in October 2011, trading on the mystique attached to the entrepreneur.
The latest auction, "First Bytes: Iconic Technology from the Twentieth Century," is being conducted online only from June 24 to July 9. The Apple 1 is to be displayed starting Monday at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, west of San Francisco.
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Ted Perry, a retired school psychologist, is expected to make a fortune when it goes up for sale at Christie's next month. Ted started using his Apple 1 computer over three decades ago - although the vintage computer has more recently been kept stashed away in a cardboard box at his home near Sacramento, California.
The green piece of plastic covered with a copper-coloured labyrinth of memory chips was one of the first 25 computer elements designed by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak in a California garage and was originally sold for $666.66.
About 200 were made but most have disappeared or been discarded, with only around 30 to 50 still believed to be in existence.
Mr Perry, 70, acquired the computer as a second-hand item he saw advertised in 1979. He paid nothing for it; it was a swap with the owner.
Bidding for the Apple 1 computer starts at $300,000 (£194,000) but it is expected to make $500,000 (£323,000) when it goes up for sale next month.
Vintage Apple products have become especially hot items since the death of Steve Jobs in October 2011, trading on the mystique attached to the entrepreneur.
The latest auction, "First Bytes: Iconic Technology from the Twentieth Century," is being conducted online only from June 24 to July 9. The Apple 1 is to be displayed starting Monday at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, west of San Francisco.
Get the latest headlines http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
Subscribe to The Telegraphhttp://www.youtube.com/subscription_c...
Like us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/telegraph.co.uk
Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/telegraph
Follow us on Google+ https://plus.google.com/1028913550727...
Telegraph.co.uk and YouTube.com/TelegraphTV are websites of The Daily Telegraph, the UK's best-selling quality daily newspaper providing news and analysis on UK and world events, business, sport, lifestyle and culture.
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