I was looking through the Excel spreadsheet that supposedly has 75% or so of what is in the auction. Sure, there are a lot of things there that I'd like to have, but the vast majority of it is stuff I'm completely uninterested in. This goes triple for the application software.
The warehouse is in Scranton, PA, only a 2.5 hour drive from New York City, so I was tempted to go take a look, just for curiosity's sake. If he wasn't already selling it as a lot I might have tried to purchase a few individual pieces, but anyway I don't have any time to make the trip in the immediate future. I agree that it's very unlikely that the lot will get sold. People would never pool money together for something like this. Probably most of us are after the same items anyway. : ) Stuart On Tue, 10 Sep 2002 19:18:18 -0500 Edward Franks <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On Tuesday, September 10, 2002, at 06:26 PM, > C.E. Forman wrote: > [Snip] > > Personally I'd love to pool money with a > bunch of other collectors and > > buy > > it up, but then we're faced with the > impossible question of who gets > > what. > > B-) > > Highest Pac-Man scores picks first. ;-) > > Or, if you wanted to follow similar rules to > the Curious Republic of > Gondor, the person that contributed the most > money would get to pick > first... > > -- > > Edward Franks > > > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > This message was sent to you because you are > currently subscribed to > the swcollect mailing list. To unsubscribe, > send mail to > [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of > 'unsubscribe swcollect' > Archives are available at: > http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/ > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- This message was sent to you because you are currently subscribed to the swcollect mailing list. To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of 'unsubscribe swcollect' Archives are available at: http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/
