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![]() by Staff Writers San Francisco (AFP) Sept 26, 2018
An Apple-1, a rare model of the first computer produced by the now-iconic tech firm, fetched $375,000 in an auction this week, according to Boston-based RR Auction. The computer was among 175 of those sold by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak from their production in a garage in Silicon Valley in the early days of Apple in 1976 and 1977. The model originally went for $666.66 when it was sold by the Byte Shop computer store in Mountain View, California in the 1970s. Jobs and Wozniak initially designed the Apple-1 as a bare circuit board to be sold as a kit and completed by electronics hobbyists, but Byte Shop owned Paul Terrell agreed to buy 50 if they were fully assembled and did not require soldering by the buyer. According to RR, the computer sold this week was restored to original running condition in June and included the original Apple-1 board, a cassette interface, keyboard and other equipment. The selling price was far from a record, however: another Apple-1 computer went for $905,000 in 2014. jc/rl/caw/ia
![]() ![]() Lighting it up: A new non-toxic, cheap, and stable blue photoluminescent material Tokyo, Japan (SPX) Sep 25, 2018 Scientists at Tokyo Institute of Technology have designed a novel photoluminescent material that is cheap to fabricate, does not use toxic starting materials, and is very stable, enhancing our understanding of the quantic nature of photoluminescence. Understanding and mastering the generation of light could allow us to build and improve upon all kinds of optical and electronic devices for various applications. Quantum dots (QDs), specially tailored nanoparticles that emit light at certain frequenc ... read more
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