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She's A Friend Of Mine / The Train Don't Stop Here No More / Black Cat Moan / Rainy Night In Paris ( Memphis Reject )/ When I Lay My Burden Down / Sweet Sweet Surrender / We Gotta Move ( Keep On Rolling )/ Miss Eleana / I Need You / Look What The Years Have Done ( personnel: Don Nix: vcl / gtr, Pete Carr / Eddie Hinton / Larry Rasberry / Bobby Manuel / Furry Lewis: gtr, George Harrison slide gtr, Wayne Perkins: gtr / bcgr. vcls, Barry Beckett / Chris Stainton: keys, Steve Smith: keys / gtr, Tim Smith: gtr / pno, David Hood / Klaus Voormann: bs, Roger Hawkins: dms, Lon Price: sax, Jay Pruitt: strings, Jeanie Green / Claudia Lennear: bcgr. vcls + The Dallas-Ft. Worth Symphony Orchestra ) ( recorded at Apple Studio, London & Muscle Shoals Sound Studio etc., produced by Don Nix ) ( reissue: P-Vine PCD-5175, 1997 JAP )</ TD >< TD >< font size =" 2 "> 1973 US </ TD ></ TR >
bs and I
Apple and I
The original Apple Computer, also known retroactively as the Apple I, or Apple-1, is a personal computer released by the Apple Computer Company ( now Apple Inc .) in 1976.
The Apple I was Apple's first product, and to finance its creation, Jobs sold his only means of transportation, a VW van and Wozniak sold his HP-65 calculator for $ 500.
The Apple I went on sale in July 1976 at a price of, because Wozniak " liked repeating digits " and because they originally sold it to a local shop for $ 500 plus a one-third markup.
Unlike other hobbyist computers of its day, which were sold as kits, the Apple I was a fully assembled circuit board containing about 60 + chips.
As Wozniak was the only person who could answer most customer support questions about the computer, the company offered Apple I owners discounts and trade-ins for Apple IIs to persuade them to return their computers, contributing to their scarcity.
As of 2012, less than 50 Apple I computers ( with only six in working order ) are believed to exist, making it a very rare collector's item.
< li > In November 2010, an Apple I with serial number 82 sold for £ 133, 250 ($ 210, 000 ) at Christie's auction house in London.
< li > On June 15, 2012, a working Apple I was sold at auction by Sotheby's for a record $ 374, 500, more than double the expected price .</ li >
A software-compatible clone of the Apple I ( Replica 1 ), produced using modern components, was released in 2003 at a price of around $ 200.
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