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Author Topic: Fred Fish's A1000 on eBay  (Read 5121 times)

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Re: Fred Fish's A1000 on eBay
« Reply #14 from previous page: August 17, 2004, 12:35:24 PM »
Collectable items are only worth what the buyer is willing to pay, regardless of what the item actually is.  

Fred Fish did play a HUGE part in establishing the critically important freeware and shareware aspect of the Amiga long before the Internet was available to mere mortals, long before even BBS's were en vogue, and even before 300 baud modems were within the reach of the average user.  

Fred Fish was the source of Amiga software for thousands of Amiga users when software wasn't easy to come by.  As such, I do see a little bit of collectability there, but to me (personally) about $100 is pretty much the limit for what would become a closet-filler.

Several people who might have a collectable Amiga fall into a much more desirable category...  Carl Sassenrath, Dale Luck, Mike Sinz, Dave Haynie, Jay Miner, and the other original developers come to mind.  These are machines owned by innovators that bear serial numbers in the tens, not thousands.

Then again, I have very little available closet space.
 

Offline redrumloa

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Re: Fred Fish's A1000 on eBay
« Reply #15 on: August 17, 2004, 01:05:37 PM »
Agreed. While I know Fred Fish has been away from the Amiga for many years, it's still sad to see him selling his A1000 off. Fred Fish was a HUGE part of Amiga's success. If this is really being sold with the original bill of sale to Fred Fish himself, I'd say it should be worth some dough. I'm tempted but I'm a bit strapped for cash, too many kids just started school :lol:
Someone has to state the obvious and that someone is me!
 

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Re: Fred Fish's A1000 on eBay
« Reply #16 on: August 17, 2004, 09:59:09 PM »
In retrospect, having several hours to consider it, I would even go so far as to say that without the early push and influence of Fred Fish, there would be no Amiga community today....  

Those who came into the Amiga realm early (85/86) will remember that the availability of software that Fred Fish made possible (with the programmers and others of course, but Fred really was the central point) was pretty much the very start of this community, long before we all got jaded with cheap Internet access.  

Hell, the availability of Fred Fish disks pretty much inspired the creation of usergroups around the world for a few years....

We owe the man a lot.  Thank you Fred.  Though I haven't the money or closet space to bid on your A1000, I sincerely wish you the best.  

Wayne Hunt
(a comparative newcomer to the Amiga realm compared to the accomplishments of Fred Fish)
 

Offline AmigaPete

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Re: Fred Fish's A1000 on eBay
« Reply #17 on: August 17, 2004, 11:15:30 PM »
I remember waiting for our next monthly user group meeting to see what Fish Disks our 'librarian' had downloaded from the BBS. And between meetings I would wait for my local shop to get the latest JumpDisk - remember those? By the time our group slowly crashed and burned due to lack of users (ca. 1993) I was the president/librarian and we had over 1000 disks.

Peter
 

Offline ent0mbed

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Re: Fred Fish's A1000 on eBay
« Reply #18 on: August 18, 2004, 12:36:26 AM »
Quote

Wayne wrote:
Fred Fish did play a HUGE part in establishing the critically important freeware and shareware aspect of the Amiga long before the Internet was available to mere mortals, long before even BBS's were en vogue, and even before 300 baud modems were within the reach of the average user.  


I remember the Fish disks being very popular, but did he do something before the Amiga?  I remember dialing into bulletin boards on my C64 with a 120 baud modem (I think that was the speed) back around 1979/80.  Anyone else remember the C-Net bulletin board system designed by Ken Pletzer?  Now those are some hazy old memories!!!  Fond ones as well.   :-)
 

Offline melott

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Re: Fred Fish's A1000 on eBay
« Reply #19 on: August 18, 2004, 02:31:20 AM »
--------------
Anyone else remember the C-Net bulletin board system designed by Ken Pletzer? Now those are some hazy old memories!!! Fond ones as well
--------------

Yup ..... I ran a C-Net C=64 BBS.
I had 2 external 3/12 inch floppies.
The same as having a large harddrive now.
Had a 1200 baud modem, it was FAST... :-D

Stealth ONE  8-)
 

Offline LocalH

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Re: Fred Fish's A1000 on eBay
« Reply #20 on: August 19, 2004, 06:56:32 AM »
I don't see how we all missed this one. All 1000 masters =P