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Want an original 1976 Apple-1 computer? It'll cost you, a lot.

Christies is set to auction off an original 1976 Apple-1 computer, and bidding could go well above half a million dollars. 

Christies is set to auction a 1976 Apple-1 computer, which could fetch upwards of $500,000 at auction. Here, an Apple-1 motherboard sold by Christies in 2010 for $212,267.

Christies

June 21, 2013

Beginning next Wednesday, June 24 – and ending on July 9 – Christies will hold an online auction titled "First Bytes: Iconic Technology from the Twentieth Century."

to Christies, among the Apple products up for grabs are a 1983 , "a prototype of the first truly portable Macintosh laptop," and an original Apple-1 machine designed and built in 1976 by Steve Wozniak. 

But it is the Apple-1 that has drawn the most interest, and for good reason: Bidding for the computer will start at $300,000 and is expected to go north of half a million bucks. "This is the seed from which the entire orchard grew, and without this, there would be no Apple," Stephen A. Edwards, a professor of computer science at Columbia University, the AP this week. "I've been shocked auction prices got into the six digits. The market has just gone crazy."

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Mr. Edwards was referring to a string of high-profile recent Apple-1 auctions: There was the Apple-1 motherboard that  $212,267 and the $671,400 sale in Germany of a still-working Apple-1 machine. (That last item was packaged at auction with "the original owner's manual and a signed letter from [Apple co-founder Steve] Jobs to original owner Fred Hatfield," CNET at the time.) 

This Apple-1 is the property of a retired school psychologist from Sacramento named Ted Perry, who apparently kept the extremely-valuable machine in a cardboard box in his house. He the AP he acquired the machine in 1979 or 1980 and that it cost him nothing at all. "I traded some other computer equipment I had for the Apple 1," he said.

Good for Mr. Perry for hanging onto the computer long enough for worldwide Apple fanaticism . And best of luck to all the bidders out there – may your fingers be quick and your pocketbooks deep. 

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