In the business sector, the depreciation schedules written into the tax codes provide an
incentive to replace hardware every 2 or 3 years, whether or not said hardware needs
replacing.
Back on the topic of this thread: wouldn't _ANY_ computer become collectable at some
point, even something like a Packard-Bell, as, say, an example of an early-1990's
commodity PC? Not that everyone would want one in their collection. Among the slide rules
I own and have used are nice laminated bamboo K&E and Post examples, but I also have a
plastic "clone" and a simple wooden no-name model.
Perhaps the thrust of the original question should be "future inoperable or
unrepairable computers..."
Bob
-----Original Message-----
From: R. D. Davis [mailto:rdd@rddavis.org]
Sent: Monday, July 21, 2003 10:55 AM
To: cctalk(a)classiccmp.org
Subject: Re: Future uncollectable computers...
<snip>
Something about all of this upgrade mania makes no sense to me.
Upgrading just for the sake of upgrading seems rather pointless. <snip>