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Author Topic: Could obsolete ASICs become expensive antiques one day?  (Read 1875 times)
Lorenzo (OP)
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March 25, 2015, 02:57:17 AM
 #1

What do you think of the possibility that Bitcoin miners could become expensive antiques one day? There is a thread on Reddit which explores this very possibility:

http://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/21ifrg/one_dev_asks_what_to_do_with_first_bitcoin_asic/

This is more of a question for those who have 1st generation BFL Jalapenos, Block Erupters, Batch 1 Avalons, and (possibly) Antminer S1s. Instead of selling your obsolete miners, could it be a smarter move to hold onto them in the hopes of their value increasing as Bitcoin awareness expands?

If Bitcoin becomes truly mainstream then those early miners will increasingly be seen as an important part of our history. For similar examples, take a look at the earliest vintage computers such as the Apple I and MITS Altair 8800 as well as vintage automobiles which can often go for thousands of dollars on eBay despite being obsolete.
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March 25, 2015, 03:08:25 AM
Last edit: March 25, 2015, 03:20:57 AM by Vod
 #2

What do you think of the possibility that Bitcoin miners could become expensive antiques one day? There is a thread on Reddit which explores this very possibility:

http://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/21ifrg/one_dev_asks_what_to_do_with_first_bitcoin_asic/

This is more of a question for those who have 1st generation BFL Jalapenos, Block Erupters, Batch 1 Avalons, and (possibly) Antminer S1s. Instead of selling your obsolete miners, could it be a smarter move to hold onto them in the hopes of their value increasing as Bitcoin awareness expands?

If Bitcoin becomes truly mainstream then those early miners will increasingly be seen as an important part of our history. For similar examples, take a look at the earliest vintage computers such as the Apple I and MITS Altair 8800 as well as vintage automobiles which can often go for thousands of dollars on eBay despite being obsolete.

I'd say it's not a possibility - it is an inevitability.

Moore's Law - processor speed doubles every year.  As a computer enthusiast, I have hundreds of old obsolete components that were once state of the art.   As a general rule, they are not worth anything unless they operate stand alone (such as computers or automobiles).  For example, a state of the art serial port (at the time) would be worthless today.  What's a serial port??

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March 25, 2015, 03:14:53 AM
 #3

One thing also is if you sold the gear and held the coins made from selling, depending on VERY far btc price selling might have been better.

I think some of the first, and very memorable asics might have a market one day.  I don't think everything will.  For example they pumped out A LOT of A1 1T Dragons, I don't see that being a antique someday.
Lorenzo (OP)
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March 25, 2015, 03:40:27 AM
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Moore's Law - processor speed doubles every year.  As a computer enthusiast, I have hundreds of old obsolete components that were once state of the art.   As a general rule, they are not worth anything unless they operate stand alone (such as computers or automobiles).  For example, a state of the art serial port (at the time) would be worthless today.  What's a serial port??

True. I have a PC from the mid 1980's that's easily worth over $100 now which I managed to buy for about $10 about 5 years ago. It came with a serial adapter which I didn't have any use for but I couldn't even sell the thing on eBay for $1.

One thing also is if you sold the gear and held the coins made from selling, depending on VERY far btc price selling might have been better.

Actually that's a good point.

Quote
I think some of the first, and very memorable asics might have a market one day.  I don't think everything will.  For example they pumped out A LOT of A1 1T Dragons, I don't see that being a antique someday.

Where I'm from, the Antminer S series seems to be the most popular model. Come to think of it, Model Ts don't really go for that much since they made so much of them unless you have one that was built in 1908 and is in flawless original condition.

Does anyone know what the rarest or historically significant miners of 2013 were? The example in the Reddit link I provided was a 1st batch Avalon. I guess that probably counts since it was the first ASIC ever delivered to customers and there was huge initial demand for them with very limited supply.
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March 25, 2015, 06:32:16 AM
 #5

There are already people buying "old tech" simply for nostalgia value. {Eg. The physical BTC coins that was banned}

I am still searching for a ZX Spectrum 48k {In a good condition} at the right price. {Even if it's not working... just for display purpose} Why.... because it was my first.  Grin Grin Grin

The sentimental value and the rarity of the item over time increase.  Sad

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Lorenzo (OP)
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April 11, 2015, 07:46:21 AM
 #6

There are already people buying "old tech" simply for nostalgia value. {Eg. The physical BTC coins that was banned}

I am still searching for a ZX Spectrum 48k {In a good condition} at the right price. {Even if it's not working... just for display purpose} Why.... because it was my first.  Grin Grin Grin

The sentimental value and the rarity of the item over time increase.  Sad


Definitely. In fact, the recent-ish rise in prices of Game Boy consoles seems to confirm this. It used to be the case that original Game Boys could be easily bought for $10 or less. Nowadays, they tend to go for a good 3-5 times this amount. You can see the pattern happening with other obsolete tech too if you look closely enough. At first, the prices fall as newer tech comes out and people sell their older gear. Then, after a while, it reaches a long, extended trough, before climbing back up again as interest in the older technology rises.

On the other hand, the pattern doesn't always take hold, especially if the older tech was manufactured in enormous numbers. However, I would think that if Bitcoin does ever truly become mainstream, then the production figures for even the most common obsolete miners such as the Antminer S series would still pale in comparison to the demand from collectors, museums, etc.
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April 11, 2015, 09:17:04 AM
 #7

There will definitely be collectors, just like there are collectors of old Apple prototypes:-)
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April 11, 2015, 03:43:58 PM
 #8

I absolutely believe they will become collectors. I still have a few block erupters on hand with original casing that I expect to have some decent value in 10+ years.

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April 11, 2015, 03:56:40 PM
 #9

They're not vintage Apples, Spectrums or even calculators though. You can't do anything with them other than look at them. They might have some historical and curiosity value but it would essentially be a lump of inert machinery.

I could get excited about an old computer or console. There are lots of memories tied up with it and you can still interact with it. I wouldn't get a boner about an Atari's power adapter.
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April 11, 2015, 04:43:13 PM
 #10

They're not vintage Apples, Spectrums or even calculators though. You can't do anything with them other than look at them. They might have some historical and curiosity value but it would essentially be a lump of inert machinery.

I could get excited about an old computer or console. There are lots of memories tied up with it and you can still interact with it. I wouldn't get a boner about an Atari's power adapter.

The Atari power adapter didn't change or signify the start of a new era. Old ASICs gave casual miners a chance to get some decent shares without having to build a huge GPU rig. It was the start of a new era in mining, and they are pretty aesthetically pleasing IMO. Some people turned their old block erupters into key chains for this reason, you don't see anyone turning old power adapters into keychains. Useless pieces of nostalgia can definitely become collectors. Time will tell Smiley


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April 11, 2015, 04:58:32 PM
 #11


The Atari power adapter didn't change or signify the start of a new era. Old ASICs gave casual miners a chance to get some decent shares without having to build a huge GPU rig. It was the start of a new era in mining, and they are pretty aesthetically pleasing IMO. Some people turned their old block erupters into key chains for this reason, you don't see anyone turning old power adapters into keychains. Useless pieces of nostalgia can definitely become collectors. Time will tell Smiley


Indeed.

I'm far from convinced, but stranger things have happened. Perhaps there'll be nostalgiacoin so they can keep running in the same way there's historic car racing series.
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April 11, 2015, 11:03:01 PM
 #12

interesting... I guess they could possibly become technology antiques/collectors items one day. I have never thought of this before, interesting though... Maybe i should buy some old asics just in case
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April 12, 2015, 04:30:37 AM
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The Atari power adapter didn't change or signify the start of a new era. Old ASICs gave casual miners a chance to get some decent shares without having to build a huge GPU rig. It was the start of a new era in mining, and they are pretty aesthetically pleasing IMO. Some people turned their old block erupters into key chains for this reason, you don't see anyone turning old power adapters into keychains. Useless pieces of nostalgia can definitely become collectors. Time will tell Smiley


Indeed.

I'm far from convinced, but stranger things have happened. Perhaps there'll be nostalgiacoin so they can keep running in the same way there's historic car racing series.

I'm surprised some of the old game consoles do so well.  But if you think of it Atari and C64, etc were pretty expensive and one per house mainly that bought them.  So makes it a lot more limited supply.

If you think of some of the miners they are limited ish.  But others fro example we had ALOT of.  For example the Asic Miner usb stick miner was pretty life changing in mining world.  But alot of us ran alot of them.  For example I ran 50, and sold some others on ebay.  There is just alot of those out there.
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April 12, 2015, 04:41:26 AM
 #14

I absolutely believe they will become collectors. I still have a few block erupters on hand with original casing that I expect to have some decent value in 10+ years.

I can agree to your statement, but maybe add 10 more years.

Those little things looked cool last year and still do.
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April 12, 2015, 05:42:51 AM
 #15

I have the block erupter blades with backplane and the power source. Hopefully they become worth something because I definitely did not turn a profit mining.  Grin

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April 12, 2015, 07:30:27 AM
Last edit: April 12, 2015, 10:14:44 AM by Amph
 #16

you could start to look at today old asic, are those considered expensive antique, and thus collectible? i don't think so, no one care about them anymore, they are like old MB, that are not necessarily anymore

instead of wasting time with those ancient miner,s they should re-use their part to build new one with better efficiency
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April 12, 2015, 09:55:38 AM
 #17

I don't see why not, can imagine seeing all sorts of mining hardware in a museum one day. Going to be a few years til they're considered antiques though, I've got a small collection of unused usb miners that might be worth a bit in a few decades (collectors always pay a premium for mint goods).


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April 13, 2015, 02:07:27 PM
 #18

I don't see why not, can imagine seeing all sorts of mining hardware in a museum one day. Going to be a few years til they're considered antiques though, I've got a small collection of unused usb miners that might be worth a bit in a few decades (collectors always pay a premium for mint goods).
But firstly collectors for items like miners would have to exist.
Just like you don't have collectors that pay 1000s of dollars flor floppy disk, this will be probably the same.
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April 13, 2015, 02:55:43 PM
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What do you think of the possibility that Bitcoin miners could become expensive antiques one day? There is a thread on Reddit which explores this very possibility:

http://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/21ifrg/one_dev_asks_what_to_do_with_first_bitcoin_asic/

This is more of a question for those who have 1st generation BFL Jalapenos, Block Erupters, Batch 1 Avalons, and (possibly) Antminer S1s. Instead of selling your obsolete miners, could it be a smarter move to hold onto them in the hopes of their value increasing as Bitcoin awareness expands?

If Bitcoin becomes truly mainstream then those early miners will increasingly be seen as an important part of our history. For similar examples, take a look at the earliest vintage computers such as the Apple I and MITS Altair 8800 as well as vintage automobiles which can often go for thousands of dollars on eBay despite being obsolete.

I'd say it's not a possibility - it is an inevitability.

Moore's Law - processor speed doubles every year.  As a computer enthusiast, I have hundreds of old obsolete components that were once state of the art.   As a general rule, they are not worth anything unless they operate stand alone (such as computers or automobiles).  For example, a state of the art serial port (at the time) would be worthless today.  What's a serial port??

Indeed, it is inevitable, the interesting part is, they may become collectables, even show in museums, just like there are museums of ancient computers now.
"And this kids are the very early Bitcoin miners". I can see it in 2140 when BTC is the leading payment method.
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April 14, 2015, 10:35:42 PM
 #20

If it wasn't for the fact that I received my BFL 60G/hs miner right before the November 2013 ATH, and that I paid for it in cash, I would have lost money on it. As it turned out I actually doubled my money by cashing out the few btc i could actually squeeze out of it right away. It became obsolete after about 2 months, even though I ran it for about 5. It sits in its box unused right now and I am going to forget about it until I start hearing about these antique hardware auctions making people rich. Probably 10 or twenty years from now. maybe sooner if btc dies or conversely, becomes universally used and accepted.

on a side note, I made a cool 1000$ for my old 160 GB iPod classic last december. I didn't expect that to happen. Apparently DJs covet them for their large storage capacity. makes sense to me, but it wont be long before apple exploits this market and re-releases them. the price has already dropped back to ~300 bucks
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