10 year rule

From: Computer Collector E-Mail Newsletter <news_at_computercollector.com>
Date: Wed Nov 17 19:03:39 2004

>>>> The 10-year rule, as I understand it, is intended to prevent the list from

degenerating into a WinTel support group.

LOL, well isn't that exactly the same conclusion we reached a couple weeks ago
(and a year ago, and the year before that, indefinitely)...?

Let's change the topic. I HEARD A RUMOR THAT SELLAM IS PUTTING HIS WHOLE
COLLECTION ON EBAY.

that oughta be fun :)

--- Bob Shannon <bshannon_at_tiac.net> wrote:

>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Doc Shipley" <doc_at_mdrconsult.com>
> To: <news_at_computercollector.com>; <General_at_mdrconsult.com>;
> "Discussion_at_mdrconsult.com :On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts"
> <cctalk_at_classiccmp.org>
> Sent: Wednesday, November 17, 2004 12:31 PM
> Subject: Re: 10 year rule
>
>
> > Computer Collector E-Mail Newsletter wrote:
> >> The terms are too similar, people will just get more confused.
> >>
> >> All I intended to do when I started this discussion topic was to point
> >> out the
> >> obsurdity of considering things like the Web and Pentiums as "vintage"
> >> (or any
> >> other synonym). But then others observed back that I was being
> >> short-sighted
> >> -- if you ignore that actual age, "vintage" just means "anything
> >> considered
> >> obsolete by the mainstream," and that's a good enough answer for me. But
> >> I do
> >> think that 15 years, not 10, is a better divider between what's just
> >> "old" and
> >> what's truly vintage.
> >
> > I think you're all looking at this completely backwards.
> >
> > The rate of electronic evolution (OK, change) has *accelerated* over
> > time, meaning that computers are obsoleted much more quickly than their
> > older counterparts. Therefore the age limit for this list should be
> > *lowered* to about 8 years now.
> >
> > Sometime in about 12 years a computer that's two weeks old will qualify
> > as a classic.
> >
> > I'll be grabbing my hat....
> >
> >
> > Doc
>
> I think the problem with this discussion is partly that age does not equal
> collectability.
>
> Lets not even discuss the concept of 'value' and really muddy the waters.
> But in any
> type of 'collectable' items, mass-production, commodity products are not as
> desirable
> as a rare or hand-made version.
>
> Think of nails here, a hand-wrought vintage nail is a lot more interesting
> than one you
> might find in a modern hardware store.
>
> Along the same lines, a production PC will probably never be a desirable
> 'vintage' computer
> however old it becomes. But 50 years from now, one of today's 'hot-rod'
> case-modder PC
> with neon tubing and a solid aluminum chassis might become an important
> cultural artifact.
> A lot of this has to do with the 'production value' of the collectable in
> question.
>
> The 10-year rule, as I understand it, is intended to prevent the list from
> degenerating into
> a WinTel support group.
>
>
>
>


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Received on Wed Nov 17 2004 - 19:03:39 GMT

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