April 21, 2010

Introducing Apple I



The first Apple computer seems positively antique by today's standards. Hand-built by Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak in Steve Jobs' parents' garage and first introduced at the Homebrew Computer Club in Palo Alto, Calif. in 1976, the Apple I had the speed and memory of a wood-framed, build-it-yourself pocket calculator. It also lacked the familiar trappings of a keyboard, a monitor, a mouse, or a hard drive. Even so, as the first all-in-one microcomputer that, once hooked up to a keyboard and monitor, didn't require extra circuitry to display text, it was a giant step forward over the competition. It came as a kit and sold for $666 (not for satanic reasons, but because Wozniak apparently preferred repeating digits). More than 200 units were sold by the Byte Shop, the first computer-retail chain. In 1999, the Apple I sealed its place as the most collectible PC of all time — one lucky tech aficionado scored $50,000 for his original Apple I.
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