Maker Pro
Maker Pro

Some very old, expensive, and interesting computer items on ebay.

D

Don McKenzie

Jan 1, 1970
0
Apple 1 original $75K

http://www.ebay.com/itm/ws/eBayISAP...sspagename=STRK:MEWAX:IT&orig_cvip=true&rt=nc

C4040 ES INTEL CPU RARE $800K

http://www.ebay.com/itm/C4040-ES-IN...tage_Computers_Mainframes&hash=item2c54ff09df

--
Don McKenzie

Web's best price on Olinuxino Linux PC:
http://www.dontronics-shop.com/olinuxino.html

The World's Cheapest Computer:
DuinoMite the PIC32 $23 Basic Computer-MicroController
http://www.dontronics-shop.com/the-maximite-computer.html
Add VGA Monitor/TV, and PS2 Keyboard, or use USB Terminal
Arduino Shield, Programmed in Basic, or C.
 
D

Don McKenzie

Jan 1, 1970
0
Funny that all the other C4040 engineering samples are in white
packages, not brown, and do not have a 1975 date code. How would an
Intel sample get to China to begin with?

doesn't look much like this one does it?
http://www.rarecpus.com/images/intelC4040.jpg

here is another nice little collection of pictures:
http://www.willsmith.org/collectible_chips/


--
Don McKenzie

Web's best price on Olinuxino Linux PC:
http://www.dontronics-shop.com/olinuxino.html

The World's Cheapest Computer:
DuinoMite the PIC32 $23 Basic Computer-MicroController
http://www.dontronics-shop.com/the-maximite-computer.html
Add VGA Monitor/TV, and PS2 Keyboard, or use USB Terminal
Arduino Shield, Programmed in Basic, or C.
 
D

Don McKenzie

Jan 1, 1970
0
doesn't look much like this one does it?
http://www.rarecpus.com/images/intelC4040.jpg

here is another nice little collection of pictures:
http://www.willsmith.org/collectible_chips/

just found a whole bunch of them which may throw a different light on the subject.
http://www.chipdb.org/cat-4040-350.htm

--
Don McKenzie

Web's best price on Olinuxino Linux PC:
http://www.dontronics-shop.com/olinuxino.html

The World's Cheapest Computer:
DuinoMite the PIC32 $23 Basic Computer-MicroController
http://www.dontronics-shop.com/the-maximite-computer.html
Add VGA Monitor/TV, and PS2 Keyboard, or use USB Terminal
Arduino Shield, Programmed in Basic, or C.
 
J

John Speth

Jan 1, 1970
0
C4040 ES INTEL CPU RARE $800K

So here's how it would go: Buyer pays $800K for chip. Buyer gets chip
but doesn't dare power it (that's a whole different issue). How does
the buyer know the chip is genuine? Is it worth more if it works?

Now consider powering it:

Will powering it destroy it? If buyer does power it and it tests bad,
should he open it to find out if he was fleeced (risking devaluing it),
just ask for his money back, or just sell it to the next sucker
perpetuating the sucker train.

I just don't see how one can see buying "collectible" micros a good thing.

JJS
 
D

Don McKenzie

Jan 1, 1970
0
H

hamilton

Jan 1, 1970
0
I should hope so, but at $800K for a 4040, I figure it is about $799.9K
over priced.
So, you'd pay $100 to get one ??
 
R

Roberto Waltman

Jan 1, 1970
0
Trevor said:
**This is very interesting. I have a 256k printer buffer I purchased
from you a few years back, that may be worth a fortune one day.

I am having a hard time convincing my wife that we need to be patient
and wait, until my garage-full-of-junk becomes Alibaba's treasure
cave.
 
Y

Yaputya

Jan 1, 1970
0
hamilton said:
So, you'd pay $100 to get one ??

If it came with a certificate of authenticity.......how easy would it be to clone
a 4040 these days?
 
T

Trevor Wilson

Jan 1, 1970
0
I am having a hard time convincing my wife that we need to be patient
and wait, until my garage-full-of-junk becomes Alibaba's treasure
cave.

**Those words probably apply to 90% of the people who read these groups.
My collection of 1,200 baud modems, 386 laptops, 256k RAm chips, 28 year
old CD players, Sony Beta machines, 20MB hard drives and valves are
surely going to be worth something. Actually, some of my crap is
(finally) starting to become valuable (I have a nice assortment of quite
valuable vaccuum tubes). SWMBO calls it "junk". She knows nothing.
 
T

Trevor Wilson

Jan 1, 1970
0
That's all part of the balance of nature. In order for my baseball card
collection to become valuable, everybody else's mom had to throw theirs
away while they were at summer camp.

(Do they have cricket cards in OZ?)

Cheers

Phil Hobbs

**Probably. Never been a follower of sports. Played some, but never
watched any. I do recall collecting cards from the local gas station,
when I was a kid. Atlantic Petrol. As always, there was one, quite rare
card. My mum probably chucked them out, along with my Superman and
Batman comics. Arrggghhh!

Lucky I've still got my Beta machines.
 
M

miso

Jan 1, 1970
0
Funny that all the other C4040 engineering samples are in white
packages, not brown, and do not have a 1975 date code. How would an
Intel sample get to China to begin with?

Your "Chinese" is a common sidebraze used "in-house." Maybe the other
packages were for engineering samples that went to outside vendors.

The free shipping makes this deal so tempting. Wait, that price isn't in
rupees?
 
S

Sylvia Else

Jan 1, 1970
0
So here's how it would go: Buyer pays $800K for chip. Buyer gets chip
but doesn't dare power it (that's a whole different issue). How does
the buyer know the chip is genuine? Is it worth more if it works?

No, the buyer must not do anything that might reveal the item to be a
fake. As long as the buyer has no grounds for such a belief, he can let
the thing appreciate some more, and then sell it at a profit. The moment
he knows it's a dud, his investment is lost.

Sylvia.
 
No, the buyer must not do anything that might reveal the item to be a
fake. As long as the buyer has no grounds for such a belief, he can let
the thing appreciate some more, and then sell it at a profit. The moment
he knows it's a dud, his investment is lost.

Schrodinger's chip?
 
W

Walter Banks

Jan 1, 1970
0
Don said:
I should hope so, but at $800K for a 4040, I figure it is about $799.9K over priced.

I agree. Does make me wonder what the two 4004's
I gave away a couple years ago are worth

w..
 
Y

Yaputya

Jan 1, 1970
0
Jon Elson said:
Geez! Shouldn't have thrown out all that old crap years ago!
I had an 8008 CPU, and probably some other vintage stuff. Hmmm,
wait, I think I still HAVE an 8008 and matching EPROMS, etc.
in an old prototype I made.

Jon

The Intel 4004 is probably worth a bit as well.....being the first uP.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_4004

You could have sold an original 8086 CPU to NASA a few years ago for
use in the space shuttle program! It seems they had to use old technology
CPUs because of the exhaustive quality control regime involved in putting
a shuttle together.

Amongst the 'old crap' that I have discarded and now regret is a
Texas Instruments SR-71 (I think) calculator (it did square roots!)
and a HP 41C which I didn't intend to dump, but went missing during
one of my relocations. I've still got the programming cards for
the magnetic card reader, useless as they are!

There is a MicroBee community out there as well, determined to keep
Australia's own PC alive.
http://www.microbee-mspp.org.au/forum/index.php
 
D

Don McKenzie

Jan 1, 1970
0
There is a MicroBee community out there as well, determined to keep
Australia's own PC alive.
http://www.microbee-mspp.org.au/forum/index.php

I am really amazed how much interest the Microbee attracts after so many years.
A very active group for what it represents.


--
Don McKenzie

Web's best price on Olinuxino Linux PC:
http://www.dontronics-shop.com/olinuxino.html

The World's Cheapest Computer:
DuinoMite the PIC32 $23 Basic Computer-MicroController
http://www.dontronics-shop.com/the-maximite-computer.html
Add VGA Monitor/TV, and PS2 Keyboard, or use USB Terminal
Arduino Shield, Programmed in Basic, or C.
 
U

UltimatePatriot

Jan 1, 1970
0
I have 100 TRILLION Dollars so it's no problem for me - they want Zimbabwe
dollars right?

I have two Alpha SBCs, but US dollars are required.
 
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