POWERING UP AN original APPLE I AFTER three decades IN A museum

The Apple I is the stuff of legend. created and marketed in 1976 by Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs, it was the very first product released by what would become today’s multi-trillion-dollar maker of iPhones and iMacs. With about 60 original ones known to exist today, prices at auction are frequently in the $300,000 range, while confirmed working ones are even a lot more valuable.

The Heinz Nixdorf Museumsforum (HNF), a computer museum in the German city of Paderborn, is fortunate enough to have an original Apple I in its collection. Although it has been there considering that 1996, it was always on static display and had never been powered on. In fact, it was unknown whether it would even work, and with it being the most useful exhibit in the entire museum, simply firing it up would be a seriously risky project.

But computers are indicated to be used, so museum director [Jochen Viehoff] made a decision to take the plunge and attempt to get the classic Apple to run again. In the four-part video series embedded below, [Jochen] describes the history of Apple’s first product and the steps he took to bring it back to life. This began with taking it out of its bullet-proof display case and bringing it upstairs to the museum’s workshop.

In buy to make a complete system, HNF staff also dug up a period-correct keyboard as well as a slightly newer Apple monitor that could display the 60 Hz composite video output. Hooking up an original power supply would have been way too risky, because a single mistake or malfunction could send their top exhibit up in flames. Instead, they used a set of lab power supplies with a programmable current limit; this way, even a dead short on the PCB would not result in any severe damage.

Not that there were any shorts: after a bit of fiddling with the keyboard and adjusting the video output level, the 45-year-old computer pertained to life and began to respond to commands. With just 256 bytes of ROM, its default feature set is rather limited, but the computer duly carried out a basic “Hello, World” program writen in 6502 maker code. It thereby joined the elite club of confirmed working Apple I’s, of which there are thought to be about twenty.

If you haven’t got $300,000 to spare but would still like to try your hand at programming the Apple I, you’ll be delighted to hear that you can get a modern copy at a far a lot more economical price. and if all that classic hardware is too fiddly for you, you might want to try implementing the Apple I on an FPGA.

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