--- Eric Chomko <chomko(a)greenbelt.com> wrote:
  Ethan Dicks wrote:
 You gotta remember the 1% rule (although it
applies
 more to systems than peripherals) - ten years later, you can get a computer
 for 1% of its original purchase price.  There are exceptions...
 due to scarcity and eBay fever. 
 Wait now, my Mac II fx, was $10,000 when it came out, that means its worth
 $100 today? 
 I have purchased $10,000 systems ten years later for $100.  I have also
 purchased $3,000 systems for $30.  Personally, I would not pay as much
 as $100 for a IIfx.  I might pay that much for a Quadra 950, but it had
 better have a bunch of RAM in it.  I have been buying MacIIsi's for $5-$10
 (to get the ethernet cards for SE/30's) and Quadra-600-series machines for
 <$20 lately.  I got a working IBM Thinkpad (486) at Dayton, with case and
 modem for $20 and a docking station for $5.  A few years ago, I passed up a
 Lisa at a Hamfest, complete with docs, software and printer - it sold later
 that day for $25.
 
 So about that 1%...
 I'll say this, though... it's not strictly linear.  It's hard to find a
 computer at 1% that originally sold for $100.  It's much easier at the
 $10,000 level.  Something about price inelasticity at the low end...
  What's eBay fever? How can I get others to
catch it? 
 eBay fever is what the guy at the hamfest had when I attempted to haggle
 over copies of David Ahl's books that he wanted $50 each for.  When I
 made a counter-offer, he said, "I can get _at least_ $50 on eBay!"  I
 asked him why he bothered to come to Dayton then, and wouldn't he just be
 happier somewhere else?  I also left without even looking at anything else
 he had to buy. 
 -ethan
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