That'd be me!
I won it. The analog board is fried, which I found out after, but still took it because I have spares and can repair it.
That'd be me!
This is an EBAY seller we're talking about here. In the subconscious mind of the seller, solidpro already got that "refund": $1,000 (seller's desired selling price) - $470 (actually selling price) = $530 fried board discount
Considering that "gyped" is EBAY's middle name, it's hard to avoid it. I've made some purchases outside EBAY before, but there are just so many vintage Mac items on EBAY that I sadly keep my eyes glued to it. I hardly every buy anything these days on EBAY, especially since USPS killed off the only economical way to ship complete systems to me outside the USA -- Ocean. But I have been ripped off before and nothing I did helped get me a discount, more less my money back. Thankfully my worst experience on EBAY was with a low cost item, but I had to pay more in shipping (to Japan via AIR) than the item was worth. Here's the story...
I believe this is an essential truth.
This may be a time when people are realizing they can wholly afford with their salaries computers they'd dreamed about as a little kid. During a recession, to this collegiate eco-nut, getting a Classic Mac was like getting a '93 Dodge Viper, or at least I showed it off to that extent. The last wave of kids who used these Macintoshes in school are finally becoming adults, and vintage is in; I can't tell you how many Oregon Trail (Apple II version) hunting scene T-shirts I've seen. And upon witnessing that trend I've observed many compliments of them, many forging hipster camaraderie over a common love for the old technology whose archaic character rebels against Facebook, 3G and iPads. In this recession, Macs are a hip, lost-cost alternative to gadgets like iPads. Furthermore, I speculate that if so, similar people's interests and thus investment in this hobby could grow like mine, which could explain the escalating prices for fully functional units, if the fascination began at a small price point.
Hmm. If your inbound toner cartridge doesn't fix that, I would call that a tad dubious.
Perhaps a little - or on the other hand a seller not understanding the difference between "Installed memory" and "Total memory" in System Profiler. It's a mistake I've seen genuine n00bs make before. The fact that a 1400 can only take 56MB of RAM might have been a small giveaway
Not overly. Considering the productive set-up you have assembled, that seems like a fair total, especially given that you didn't want to wait forever for bargain basement specials. IMHO you got a mix of genuine bargains (those eMates!) slightly over the odds (second IIci - unless that included shipping?) average/fair price, and a spot of bad luck (the Laserwriter). Seems par for the ebay course to me, and you have what you want at a price you're OK with, so .. yay.
No more so than everyone else who bid on those items. Such is the market. And no, not at all, that was a very interesting and relevant post. Thankyou.
Seems everymac concurs. I am probably misrememberating.
Given the accessory bundle you got with it and the fact that shipping included a monitor, not excessively.
) :scrambled: You selling any of those eMates on? Seems like you could recoup some money for the cells and labour by selling them as fully working.
6.0.8 in fact is basically 6.0.7 with LaserWriter 7.0 drivers.