Apple Turns 50, and Now You Can Literally Buy a Piece of Steve Jobs’ Life for Thousands of Euros

To mark Apple’s 50th anniversary, a major memorabilia auction has gone live – and it’s packed with vintage hardware, signed documents, and deeply personal Steve Jobs items. The catalog includes nearly 200 lots, turning the celebration into a collector’s fever dream. If you’ve ever wanted something that feels like a tangible fragment of Apple history, this is about as direct as it gets.

 

To celebrate Apple’s 50th anniversary, RR Auction has launched a sale featuring close to 200 lots that blend vintage computing with artifacts from Steve Jobs’ personal life. It’s an obvious magnet for anyone fascinated by the company’s legacy, because these aren’t merely old gadgets – they’re historical pieces, many carrying signatures from Jobs, Steve Wozniak, and other key figures tied to Apple’s origin story.

For collectors, that means access to the company’s past through items that mix nostalgia with real narrative weight. One of the most coveted pieces is Apple’s first-ever check, signed by Jobs and Wozniak. The original value was just the equivalent of €430 back in 1976, but at auction it’s expected to climb beyond €430,000.

 

Steve Jobs’ most unique artifacts

 

The catalog also includes other lots that could approach the half-a-million-euro range. A standout example is the Apple-1 Prototype Board #0, an early-stage prototype that’s basically a fossil in PC-history terms. The collection further lists Jobs’ desk alongside notebooks from Reed College, material from his time at Atari, tapes from his Bob Dylan collection, and even high school bow ties.

A large portion of the memorabilia is being sold thanks to John Chovanec, Jobs’ half-brother, who preserved these items for years and is now bringing them to market to coincide with the milestone anniversary. As a result, the event operates like a temporary museum: a preview exhibition is open through the end of January, giving visitors the rare chance to see objects that would normally stay boxed away.

RR Auction isn’t the only place where Apple-related history is being traded, either. Other auction houses have also handled major pieces from the company’s past, including the original company charter, which has been valued at between €1.5 million and €3.5 million. It’s another reminder that the price is often less about the object itself, and far more about provenance, condition, and authentication.

Much like the world of Pokémon cards or retro video games, grading and certification heavily influence how these items are priced. Fifty years ago, Jobs, Wozniak, and Ronald Wayne – the lesser-known third co-founder of Apple – were simply three people chasing a dream. Today, that same history has turned into luxury merchandise, and plenty of buyers are eager to take a piece of it home.

Source: 3djuegos

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BadSector is a seasoned journalist for more than twenty years. He communicates in English, Hungarian and French. He worked for several gaming magazines - including the Hungarian GameStar, where he worked 8 years as editor. (For our office address, email and phone number check out our impressum)