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by reaperducer 2321 days ago
The market will speak up

The real problem is greed.

People find these computers in basements and barns and flea markets and think they've found a treasure. They put it on fleaBay and expect to get instantly rich. When they don't, they throw the machines in the trash.

I've seen computers worth about $80 listed online for $1,000 or more. I've seen people win auctions for computers at reasonable prices only to have the seller ask for more money, then cancel the auction when the winner won't pony up another $800.

3 comments

> worth about $80

How do you define worth? We are talking about goods that do not have any intrinsic value here, so their value is whatever people are willing to pay for them.

That comment sure looks to me like a scenario where people are willing to pay $80!
> The real problem is greed.

Yes, and it's getting worse. Nowadays it's quite common to see a retro computer broken up into it's respective parts (keyboard, case, mobo, psu, etc) and sold off as individual auctions because the seller knows they'll get more money that way.

And don't get me started on the sellers who rip the SID and VIC chips off of perfectly working C64 motherboards to sell them separately at inflated prices! Grrrr.

That sounds like a rational market. Some people need parts and where else are they going to come from?

If the price for a complete system goes higher or enough people sell parts from broken machines and parts prices go down, they'll stop doing it.

I mean I get that, you're right it's greed but, people can put whatever price they want, we're not obligated to pay that and doesn't mean it will sell.

Rent is expensive so generally people don't want to hang on to stuff they don't need so the price will eventually come down if supply goes up.