Rare Apple-1, said to be Woz-built, up for auction


Get out your checkbooks, Silicon Valley geeks and Apple fan folk! You’ve got a chance to view — and even buy — one of the very first Apple computers, hand-soldered by legendary Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak.

Well, maybe.

A leading expert and the auction house say the device — a broken circuit board apparently crammed in a drawer for years — is a rare Wozniak-built computer that Steve Jobs, Apple’s other co-founder, used to woo a pioneering retailer at a Mountain View computer shop in a seminal tech-industry moment in 1976. But the claim touched off a lively debate among veterans of the era contacted by the Bay Area News Group, with the retailer and even Woz himself saying they’re not at all sure it’s that computer.

“My hunch,” Wozniak said in an email Thursday after being sent photos of the device, “is that it’s one of the first but not that we hand-soldered.”

In any case, all involved agree — it is an early version of Apple’s first retail home computer and extremely valuable.

The Apple-1 will be displayed this weekend at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View. Once considered “lost,” the device has a circuit board with solders indicating work by Wozniak and represents “the holy grail of Steve Jobs and Apple memorabilia,” according to the auction house expecting to sell it for at least $500,000. As of Friday morning, bidding stood at $407,029, with the auction live until Aug. 18.

An extremely rare "Apple-1" computer, Apple's first product, launched by company co-founders Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak in 1976. Up for auction until Aug. 18, 2022 and on display at the Computer History Museum on July 6-7, 2022, the device is said by the auction company and a vintage computer association to be a prototype hand-wired by legendary Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak and used by the other co-founder Steve Jobs to woo Apple's first retail vendor, but its role in Apple's history is disputed. (Courtesy of RR Auction)
An extremely rare “Apple-1” computer, Apple’s first product, launched by company co-founders Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak in 1976. Up for auction until Aug. 18, 2022 and on display at the Computer History Museum on July 6-7, 2022, the device is said by the auction company and a vintage computer association to be a prototype hand-wired by legendary Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak and used by the other co-founder Steve Jobs to woo Apple’s first retail vendor, but its role in Apple’s history is disputed. (Courtesy of RR Auction) 

While revolutionary at the time, the device had 256 bytes of memory. Today, a modern Mac computer has four to eight million times more than that.

Mike Graff, spokesman for Boston-based RR Auction, said Jobs gave the Apple-1 to its current owner, who wants to remain anonymous, around 1990. The device had languished for years in a drawer “with things on top of it and below it” in the famed “Apple Garage” where Jobs and Wozniak did their early work in Jobs’ childhood home in Los Altos, said Corey Cohen, a board member of the Vintage Computer Federation and a prominent Apple-1 expert.

Cohen and the auction house say Jobs used this prototype to demonstrate the Apple-1 to Paul Terrell, owner of the Byte Shop in Mountain View, one of the world’s first personal computer stores.

However, Terrell told the Bay Area News Group this week that he isn’t convinced it’s the same device.

Now 78, Terrell remembers watching Jobs and Wozniak — “kids with long hair and sandals trying to start a company” — touting their new computer in 1976 at a monthly meeting of the now-legendary Homebrew Computer Club. As the owner of 13 Byte Shop computer stores, Terrell regularly attended the gatherings, he said.

Terrell remembers Wozniak telling club members in the auditorium of the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center in Menlo Park that if they wanted to see the device in action, they should stop by the exit on the way out for a demonstration.

“When I went outside the door and saw what was going on there I said, ‘Oh my God — I’d love to have that in my Byte Shop to sell,’” Terrell said.

He invited Jobs to come by his shop in Mountain View the next day. “I told him I wanted a fully assembled and tested computer that I could sell to people like programmers and so forth,” Terrell said. “And I would give him $500 each.”

Here’s where things get murky: Terrell believes the Apple-1 up for auction is a production model from “the first delivery” of 50 computers he received to sell and not the prototype Wozniak and Jobs brought to the club meeting.

Achim Baqué, of Germany, curator of the “Apple-1 Registry” that tracks the computers, shares Terrell’s belief that the computer up for auction is not the unit from the Homebrew meeting. He also doesn’t think it is one sent to Terrell’s shop for retail sale. Instead, Baqué said he thinks it was the factory-made “one and only production prototype” representing a final design before mass production, not hand built by Wozniak but featuring some modifications he made by hand.

Cohen begs to differ. To start, the device up for auction is hand-soldered, bearing tell-tale signs of Wozniak’s work, Cohen said.

“The wires run in a very tight way, and the shape of the solder is unique to how the soldering technique is done,” Cohen said. Wozniak is “famous for doing this. He puts the soldering iron in one hand, puts the wire in the other hand, and he puts the lead solder in his mouth. Very few people do this. They use tape to hold things in place. Because he’s doing it with his mouth, there’s a little less precision. It’s literally an up-and-down motion from his head.”

The device is made of a composite board far too fragile for mass production, and retail devices had fiberglass circuit boards that looked much different than the one up for auction, Cohen said.

Auction house spokesman Bobby Livingston called Cohen a “world-renowned expert on Apple 1s” and said the auction house is confident the piece “is properly described. We guarantee it.”

Cohen and Terrell agree Polaroids of the device were taken by Terrell in 1976, but Cohen insists Terrell is “definitely misremembering” by asserting the photos show one of the first 50 devices he received to sell and not the prototype shown by Jobs and Wozniak. “People’s memories are faulty, but you can’t argue with the facts. We have the evidence,” Cohen said.

A Polaroid photo taken by pioneering Byte Shop computer store owner Paul Terrell, of a rare early Apple-1 computer. Which generation of the Apple-1 the photo shows is disputed.(Photo courtesy of RR Auction)
A Polaroid photo taken by pioneering Byte Shop computer store owner Paul Terrell, of a rare early Apple-1 computer. Which generation of the Apple-1 the photo shows is disputed.(Photo courtesy of RR Auction) 

What’s Woz think? He could not say which iteration of the Apple-1 computer the device represents because the photos provided “no real clues” and showed the standard parts he used.

Woz admits he’s stumped: “I can’t tell you what exact generation this board is.”

 


WHERE YOU CAN SEE IT

Get a glimpse at the Apple-1 along with other notable relics of computing during the Vintage Computer Festival West 2022 at the Computer History Museum this weekend from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday.



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