On Sunday, May 5th AKAcastor muttered...
I find it frustrating that the cost of retro computer parts has gone up, but any time I do the math on "I should have kept it around since the 1980s!" the cost of storing things is way higher than the cost to buy again, even at current prices. (I do not intend to stop hoarding just yet though haha)
I'm always fighting hoarders who don't seem to understand the cost of sorting, organizing, cleaning, keeping, moving, re-sorting, and finding these things.
Especially cables, I just bought a VGA cable for $1 at a thrift store, that's way cheaper than keeping it through the ~25 moves I made during my young adulthood.
I needed an Apple IIgs video cable, they cost like $35 on ebay, but I was able to purchase DB-15 male to rj-45 modular adapters for $2.94 ea after shipping, as it turns out the real cable only uses 8 pins. So I bought enough parts to make three cables for $18. Remember that cables, even ribbon cables, are very affordable to make or find on digikey etc.
The computers are 40 years old, we can wait a few more days to buy or build a cable :)
I lament sometimes that I gave away a C64 and Apple II ~16 years ago, when they could be found at goodwill for $15, and now even goodwill sells them on ebay for hundreds. But if I kept things like that, I would have paid thousands in storage or movers or required to rent or buy a large vehicle to move them myself. This adds up to thousands of dollars, and there is a sort of "cost" in having to shuffle through bins and move them around and organize and label them and find things in them, and to take away useful space in your home for them and all of the extra stress, like when I suffered local wildfires in california and loaded my vehicle with all of my valuables.
I also sometimes think if I only knew the "retro gaming" market would blow up, I would have bought nintendos, segas, neogeos, whatever, and multiple copies of every popular game and bagged and stored them and what a great investment..
But any 1980's computer can still be purchased for less than the original cost. Calculate the inflated value, and, if you instead had invested into S&P 500 or the like, you could afford to buy 10x the retro computers for the 1980's value invested.
Also consider for the first twenty years these went *down* in value, I remember buying a Sega+CD with games for just $5. The 2020 covid pandemic was a market "peak" and it's coming back down again. Even if you bought the most "extreme" value items like an Apple 1 computer, rare nintendo accessories etc, dollar-for-dollar you would have done better to just buy stocks in those same companies. And, for much of their lifetime, stocks would have had significant gains that you could have sold at any time to divest or buy a home. Nobody could have predicted a youtube+pandemic market peak would happen. And stocks don't take up space in your home, you won't have to worry about wether to buy and regularly test a battery-backed sump in case of your basement flooding and ruining stocks, lol.
A lot of people wish they would have bought Amazon, Tesla, Microsoft, etc. stocks at an early time. But remember, if you were buying those kinds of stocks you were also buying stocks in Nokia, pets.com, GeoCities, AOL, Nortel, etc.
So, this isn't financial advice. I just want to suggest that saving your money over your career and investing in a well-rounded portfolio is a lot more likely to afford a retrocomputing hobby today than if you were to buy and keep microcomputers and gaming consoles at the time they were popular :) please don't hoard, sell the stuff you never use that can be again on ebay later!
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