For me; at least; the interest is not for profit. It is for my own personal
enjoyment; and for history. If every Apple ][ is thrown away; once
very-common items become very rare.
-----Original Message-----
From: Olminkhof <jolminkh(a)c2.telstra-mm.net.au>
To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Date: Monday, December 08, 1997 1:13 PM
Subject: Re: Importance of "original" parts
How important
is it to obtain computers in their "original" state? Is it
worth it to save a computer that is known to have been hacked together?
I think it's worth saving anything that might eventually fill in part of a
jigsaw.
For example: I have an original Mac 128k. However,
I believe that the
motherboard has been upgraded to the 512k "Fat" Mac. I purchased it at the
University of Michigan's Property Disposal warehouse, which means I was
lucky to find a matching keyboard and mouse and I have no hope of finding
the original manuals or shipping boxes for it.
.
.
Should I even bother to restore this machine to
it's original state by
purchasing an original (but not _the_ original) motherboard, assuming I
can even find one, or should I just use the machine as is and forget about
any attempts at historical accuracy? At what point do I wind up with
Washington's Hatchet, or does it even matter?
Mostly, you will be very lucky to pick up the bits you want. I think
eventually a swap culture will arrive but you need to have something to
with. We are in a rescue-from-the-garbage phase at the
moment, so I believe
in hoarding everything I find ..... that I can find space for that is!
Hans