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Standard User nonymouse
(experienced) Wed 18-Feb-09 19:13:00
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Old Prices... New prices


[link to this post]
 
I've just received an e-mail from a well known Memory re-seller...

1Gb for £9.97

That got me thinking....

I once paid £350 for a 16Mb SIMM... (in about 1995) for a Performa 630

If memory had stayed the same cost I would have paid £21,875 for the 1Gb chip!!

Does anyone else have a similar story?

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8Mb Metronet,plusnet ~6.2Mbps at mo frown
Speedtouch 580
DualCore Intel Mac Mini (Leopard), G4 Dual 1GHz(Leopard): OSX 10.5.5; G3 PB (no screen), OSX 10.4
Dell Latitude, WinXP Pro
iLive an iLifev.6
iWorkv.3

What does it all mean
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Edited by nonymouse (Wed 18-Feb-09 20:54:33)

Moderator billford
(moderator) Wed 18-Feb-09 19:21:08
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Re: Old Prices... New prices


[re: nonymouse] [link to this post]
 
First separate HDD I bought, they were about £1/Megabyte... My last HDD would have been about £1,000,000 crazy

~~~~~~~~~~~~
Bill

[email protected]
The author of the above post is a thinkbroadband moderator but it does not constitute an official statement on behalf of thinkbroadband.
Standard User deleted
(deleted) Wed 18-Feb-09 19:46:06
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Re: Old Prices... New prices


[re: billford] [link to this post]
 
I think in about 1992 I had 20mb hard drive installed into an amstrad portable (it couldn't be described as a laptop) for the price of £290


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Standard User trailertrash
(regular) Wed 18-Feb-09 20:05:19
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Re: Old Prices... New prices


[re: nonymouse] [link to this post]
 
1970 'Pocket' calculator - the size of a paperback - LED, yes LED, display, no memory and just basic functions £100.00. (Two months wages for me in 1970)

t t
Standard User Desmond
(sensei) Wed 18-Feb-09 20:11:57
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Re: Old Prices... New prices


[re: nonymouse] [link to this post]
 
In the RAM stakes I bought a 2MB stick way back when that set me back nearly £300. Actually, I bought two to upgrade two separate machines in the office. At £150 per MB the current value of all the RAM sticks in all my machines would be ....... wait for it......£5,526,000! shocked

That's nothing compared to the HD storage difference to the 40MB drive I once used to upgrade my Mac LC II. I just roughly added up the HD value of all my machines and its nearly £9,000,000 at the same price per MB as that 40MB drive. shocked

Des

The original 32 bit junkie now snorting pure 64. BT Yeehaw! 8 Mbit BT Homehub2, Wired, Wireless, VoIP, 2 Macs, 2.5 Hackintoshes, 3.5 PCs, OS X, Win XP, MCE, Vista, Ubuntu.

Rehab is for quitters

Edited by Desmond (Wed 18-Feb-09 20:12:56)

Standard User deleted
(deleted) Wed 18-Feb-09 20:15:58
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Re: Old Prices... New prices


[re: nonymouse] [link to this post]
 
4K of RAM for my UK101 (more years ago than I care to remember), £40. That would be £ 163,840 for 16Mb, or £10,485,760 for 1Gb.
Standard User Spud2003
(experienced) Wed 18-Feb-09 20:20:13
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Re: Old Prices... New prices


[re: deleted] [link to this post]
 
There was a time when flatbed scanners were hugely expensive. I remember around 1995 getting an HP ScanJet (SCSI) for around £700 (?) . Can't remember the exact dimensions, it was a bit wider and longer than A4, but not much. tongue
Standard User Desmond
(sensei) Wed 18-Feb-09 20:24:48
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Re: Old Prices... New prices


[re: trailertrash] [link to this post]
 
Somewhere around here i have one of the gold plated Sinclair Sovereign LED calculators. It's probably worth a bit of money now.... Maybe, even more than it once cost (I bought it for £20 in a junk shop somewhere in the 80s) and last time i looked it still worked. I also have one of the iconic 80s Braun calculators, which cost about £180 odd new. I still use that every single day.

Des

The original 32 bit junkie now snorting pure 64. BT Yeehaw! 8 Mbit BT Homehub2, Wired, Wireless, VoIP, 2 Macs, 2.5 Hackintoshes, 3.5 PCs, OS X, Win XP, MCE, Vista, Ubuntu.

Rehab is for quitters
Standard User deleted
(deleted) Thu 19-Feb-09 09:06:15
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Re: Old Prices... New prices


[re: Desmond] [link to this post]
 
The first hard drive I ever saw was called a "Winchester". It was the same size as a small suitcase and had 10Mb of storage space. We ran a 16 station network from it.

The first calculator I used was in 1968 - just very basic and the size of a modern day laptop. It cost the equivalent of my annual salary - £350!. It was useless because at the time I was a quantity surveyor and we were calculating in pounds, shillings and pence and yards, feet and inches.
Standard User ian_c
(knowledge is power) Thu 19-Feb-09 11:08:55
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Re: Old Prices... New prices


[re: deleted] [link to this post]
 
I was a quantity surveyor and we were calculating in pounds, shillings and pence and yards, feet and inches.

Q: How many surveyors does it take to change a lightbulb?

A: CHANGE?!?!?! What do you mean change?

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