What computers hold their value the most? pic unrelated
Pic related actually, medical devices
>>59535593
Radiation hardened CPUs in space probes
Voyager 1 was launched in 1977
entered interstellar space
and is still in contact with Earth.
128 register, nibble-serial CPU and 8096 words of 16-bit RAM. It ran about 80,000 instructions per second.
If you could retrieve Voyager 1, it would probably sell for far more than its original price adjusted for inflation ^:)
>>59535593
>>59535608
this, you can make a lot of money selling refurbished medical equipment
>>59535593
>pic unrelated
It certainly is.
>>59535956
How much can I make if I do it
>>59535714
>Voyager 1
>Humanity may one day bring Voyager 1 back to earth.
>It'll likely be a milestone achievement akin to putting a man on the moon.
>It'll sit in a museum, home again.
>>59535978
Refurbished pacemakers clock around 1 grand a piece.
Morgue usually doesn't take them out, unless they are performing autopsy for suspected unnatural cause of death.
>>59535978
depending on what it is and the condition, you can make 1-10k on one sale. some hospitals will basically give old shit away because they're running out of space, so you can operate at a fairly low cost. on the other side of the coin, you now have to store that shit. medical equipment is big and fucking heavy, so it can be a pain in the ass.
>>59535608
>>59535714
>>59535956
>>59535965
>>59535978
>>59536005
>>59536028
>>59536031
holy shit autists i just want to know what laptops and shit hold their value the most
>>59536112
>holy shit autists i just want to know what laptops and shit hold their value the most
Absolutely none of them. Not even the collectors items sell for anything close to what they were new.
>>59536124
that sucks. :(
>>59536028
time to go dig dig dig.
>>59536112
apple stuff holds it's value best out of any consumer shit