A
rare working model of the Apple 1, the tech giant's first desktop
computer, sold for more than $671,000 over the weekend at an
auction in Germany.
The
computer, along with a letter from Apple co-founder
Steve
Job sto
its original owner, is believed to be one of only six working Apple
1s and one of only three on the open market.
The
Apple PC was expected to bring at least $400,000. But Breker said
it's no surprise that it fetched more than 50% more. In November, his
team auctioned a similar model for $640,000. Sotheby's New York sold
one last year for $375,000.
Prices
for the rare devices have gone up since Jobs' death in 2011. In
November 2010, Christie's
auctioned an Apple 1 for $212,000.
"It's
not only the technology of the world's first ready-to-use PC,"
Breker said in an e-mail to CNN. "It's more the symbol of the
American Dream -- the story of two dropouts who had a superb idea ...
and 35 years later their company is the richest and highest-valued
company ever."
Jobs
and Steve Wozniak famously created the Apple computer in Jobs' family
garage, building the device by hand and financing the company through
the sale of Wozniak's fancy calculator and Jobs' VW camper van.
About
200 Apple 1s were built, and fewer than 50 are believed to exist
still -- most of them not in working order.
Saturday's
lot also included the letter from Jobs to a Fred Hatfield at Computer
Data Systems in Columbus, Ohio. Dated January 18, 1978, the letter
offers Hatfield the chance to trade in his Apple 1, and $400, for an
Apple II. He obviously did not take Jobs up on the offer.

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