I'm just not a collector. There's no material thing anywhere you can truly own or have. In the end, there's only your mind of which you are partly in control. But there's a lot of things you can do to cover up for that, like collecting keyboards or writing in a keyboad forum about keyboard collecting.
I'm just not a collector. There's no material thing anywhere you can truly own or have. In the end, there's only your mind of which you are partly in control. But there's a lot of things you can do to cover up for that, like collecting keyboards or writing in a keyboad forum about keyboard collecting.
Yes I agree, although I hope that all of us are very much in control of their minds!
ohaimark wrote: I <3 all of those Leading Edge logos. Almost makes me wish I was a retrocomputing collector and not a keyboard enthusiast...
Never too late to get started, us computer collectors don't bite . Buy that Leading Edge and find a network card and you can even get on IRC with it no problem.
It's too rich for me at the moment, unfortunately. Just joined Google Fi and spent my last discretionary funds on their excellent Nexus 5X deal.
They certainly loved their logo! And, speaking of summoning, it does look mildly occult. If one were to use it in a ritual one would likely get an entity from Korean folklore (which wouldn't speak English ).
Q: I would be interested in purchasing the keyboard separately.
A: I know that the keyboard would sell easily, but I'm more interested in selling the entire system at once. Sorry.
May 01, 2016
Q: What is the model number of the keyboard (look on back side label)? Thanks.
A: They keyboard model # is DC-2014
Agree on that. Harder to find complete sets than separate keyboard and computer. It's also turning a lot of vintage computer collectors against us here, thinking we do nothing but separate sets and destroy the keyboards for parts.
Compgeke wrote: Agree on that. Harder to find complete sets than separate keyboard and computer. It's also turning a lot of vintage computer collectors against us here, thinking we do nothing but separate sets and destroy the keyboards for parts.
That would have certainly been the case here with the DC-2014.
There's probably more demand for old computers than one would think. I just sold a NEC PC for $150, if I would've shipped the monitor from Japan it could have probably been double that. Not to mention the Blue Alps keyboard I'm keeping for myself. I only have one older PC myself (Sharp X68000) but it's pretty cool and I'd certainly buy more if I had the space and monetary means.
Compgeke wrote:
Harder to find complete sets than separate keyboard and computer.
It's also turning a lot of vintage computer collectors against us here, thinking we do nothing but separate sets and destroy the keyboards for parts.
I can see the point, but how much demand is there, really, for old DOS computers? How much is my 35mm camera worth?
Consider the auto junkyard with the obsolete cars, rusting away for years, until someone wants that seat or steering wheel.
On a general level, I agree with you, there is not much demand for the majority of old DOS computers, especially those in poor condition or missing parts, but here is a well known model in very good condition that is complete and includes documentation. The car analogy: There would not be much demand for a 69 station wagon with a trashed interior and severe rust, but there would be for a 69 Camaro in original condition with dealer invoice, window sticker, and owners manual.
My analogy is not a great one as obviously there is more demand for old cars than old computers, but you get the idea.
emdude wrote: Indeed! There's already a bid from someone with 0 feedback.
Ebay should really not allow people with no feedback to bid. It's so easy to self bid and drive up prices wayy above what they're supposed to be. Guess they don't want to fix it cause it benefits them. More of a % profit if the prices are higher...
Could also be a small matter of not wanting to strangle their platform. How are new users meant to get a feedback score if they are locked out of interaction until they get a feedback score?
A lot of people only ever buy. Took me years to do my first sale on eBay.
Muirium wrote: Could also be a small matter of not wanting to strangle their platform. How are new users meant to get a feedback score if they are locked out of interaction until they get a feedback score?
A lot of people only ever buy. Took me years to do my first sale on eBay.
That's true. I wonder what kind of method would work to stop shill bidding? Stuff like this is kind of a problem.