Apple sold by Steve Jobs from parents' garage up for auction
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[NEW YORK] An early Apple device sold by Steve Jobs from his parents' garage goes under the hammer in New York next month valued at US$400,000-US$600,000 in an increasingly competitive computer relic market.
Christie's says the Apple-1 is the only surviving such computer documented to have been sold directly by the late Apple founder to a customer from the garage in Los Altos, California.
It goes on sale in New York on December 11, the auctions house said.
The Apple-1 is considered a vanguard of the personal computer revolution, being the first pre-assembled personal computer ever sold.
Christie's says its estimated value of US$400,000 to US$600,000 is the highest pre-sale estimate for an Apple-1 offered at auction.
Institutions have snapped up relics of computing history, making it rare for private collectors to acquire specimens on the market, and prices are rising.
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Last month, auction house Bonhams sold for US$905,000 in New York an Apple-1 built by Jobs's business partner Steve Wozniak.
Considered the world's most expensive computer relic, it was bought by the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan.
In 2013, Christie's sold a 1976 Apple-1 for US$387,750 and in 2010 another for 133,250 British pounds in London - US$212,267 at the time.
AFP
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