Hi, > Purchased directly from Steve Wozniak by the consignor in Autumn 1972
This seems strange to me Looking at the chips, I see 1820-0054 ; 7304 9316 DC ; F 7403 9390/7490 ; PCF 7422 The numbers on the first row are valid IC part numbers. The numbers on the second row look like year+week date codes in 1973 and 1974 which indicate to me that the device was not sold pre-assembled in 1972. Thanks, John On Fri, 30 Oct 2020 at 12:18, Stephen Loosley <stephenloos...@outlook.com> wrote: > Bonhams Auction > > https://www.bonhams.com/auctions/26078/lot/62/ > > LOT 62: STEVE WOZNIAK & STEVE JOBS. > > Blue Box, 1972. An original first iteration "blue box" populated circuit > board made by Steve Wozniak and marketed by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak, > 51 x 72 mm, with speaker wire and 9volt battery connector. > > US$ 8,000 - 12,000 > AU$ 11,000 - 17,000 > > Bid _________ > > Auction ends: 5 Nov 2020, 10:00 PST Los Angeles > > Blue Box, 1972. An original first iteration "blue box" populated circuit > board made by Steve Wozniak and marketed by Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak, > 51 x 72 mm, with speaker wire and 9volt battery connector. > > Provenance: Purchased directly from Steve Wozniak by the consignor in > Autumn 1972 during a drive together from Sunnyvale to Los Angeles. > > While "phone phreakers" (hobbyists who were fascinated by the phone > system) had used a "blue box" since the 1950s to avail themselves of free > phone service, the first digital blue box was designed by Steve Wozniak in > 1972. > > It was marketed and sold by Steve Wozniak (who took the phone phreak name > "Berkeley Blue"), Steve Jobs (known as "Oaf Tobar"), and friends in > Berkeley and throughout California in 1972 and 1973. Wozniak cites the > number of boxes they produced at 40 or 50, while Jobs put the number at > 100; but certainly many of those were confiscated as phone phreaking > arrests increased throughout 1973 to 1975, in part due to the commercial > distribution of the devices. > > These blue boxes represent the first commercial collaboration between the > two Apple computer giants, and the circuit boards the first printed boards > by Woz. Very few of the Wozniak originals have survived and even fewer of > these first iteration boards as Wozniak soon changed the circuit board > layout to accommodate a less expensive membrane keypad. The early models > would have been made by Wozniak himself. > > In 1971, Esquire magazine published an article titled "Secrets of the > Little Blue Box," subtitled "A story so incredible it may even make you > feel sorry for the phone company," about a loose band of engineers who had > figured out how to hack Bell telephones automatic switching systems, moving > freely through Bell's "trunk" telephone systems with the use of specific > frequency tones generated by "blue boxes." > > The story of these "phone phreaks" was a sensation, and one particularly > important reader was a young engineering student at Berkeley named Steve > Wozniak. As Wozniak recalls, his first move after reading the piece was to > call his good friend Steve Jobs, then still a senior in high school, and > the next day they jumped in Woz's car and headed to the Stanford Linear > Accelerator library to comb through the stacks searching for clues that > would substantiate the details presented in the Esquire account. > > They found it, according to Wozniak: "I froze and grabbed Steve and nearly > screamed in excitement that I'd found it. We both stared at the list, > rushing with adrenaline. We kept saying things like 'Oh, ....!' and 'Wow, > this thing is for real!' I was practically shaking, with goose bumps and > everything. It was such a Eureka moment" (Wozniak, p.100). > > As they drove back to Berkeley they discussed the possibility of creating > a "blue box" in a state of elation, and within three weeks Wozniak had > devised one. Finding the frequencies produced by the analog blue box to > vary widely, he then designed the world's first digital blue box. > > In his biography, he recalls, "I swear to this day—the day I'm telling you > this and the day you're reading it—I have never designed a circuit I was > prouder of: a set of parts that could do three jobs at once instead of two. > I still think it was incredible" (Wozniak, p.102). > > Over the next few weeks, with the fortuitous assistance of "Captain > Crunch," a blue boxer named John Draper who featured prominently in the > Esquire article and became an instant hero to hackers and phreakers > everywhere, Wozniak honed his design, eventually creating the world's first > digital blue box, which was able to produce a much more consistent > frequency than the analog contraptions that had existed previously. > > Now equipped with a "blue box," the two young men and their friends > explored the phone system, including Wozniak's famous story about reaching > the Vatican, and pretending to be Henry Kissinger calling for the Pope (who > was unfortunately asleep at the time). > > Before long, Jobs came up with a plan to market these boxes to willing > Berkeley students eager to make free phone calls. They would knock on > random doors in the Berkeley dorms and ask for a made-up name, who of > course was not available. They would explain they were looking for the guy > who makes all the free phone calls, you know, with the blue box. If their > mark expressed interest or curiosity, they would proceed to sell him a box. > > With Jobs' novel marketing plan and Wozniak's design, they ended up > earning about $6000 on the project, making blue boxes for $40 in parts, and > selling them for $150. > > According to Bill Claxton, who Captain Crunch notes as being in the dorm > the first time he went to meet Woz, the earliest blue boxes used solid keys > (this present iteration), which were quickly replaced with a soft keypad > (as the example sold in these rooms on December 6, 2017) in order to make > the boxes more affordable. > > Looking back on the entire experience, Steve Jobs would observe, "Woz and > I learned how to work together, and we gained the confidence that we could > solve technical problems and actually put something into production." > > "If it hadn't been for the Blue Boxes, there would have been no Apple. I'm > 100% sure of that." -Steve Jobs > > -- > _______________________________________________ > Link mailing list > Link@mailman.anu.edu.au > http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link > _______________________________________________ Link mailing list Link@mailman.anu.edu.au http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link