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500K

Apple I
Product Reviews

An original Apple I PC just sold for $500K and now I’m frantically ransacking boxes of old PC and Apple kit for my retirement fund

by admin September 23, 2025



An original Apple I computer just hit $475,000 in an auction sale (via Tom’s Hardware). The Apple I was conceived as a bare circuit board for which enthusiasts would build their own case, but this unit was one of 50 made for Byte Shop and sold with a natty wooden case. Only nine of the 50 are known to survive today.

Apart from the sheer portent of an original Apple I and the particular rarity of this version (it’s thought there were only around 200 Apple I computers ever built, so this machine is in a very rarefied niche, even among Apple I’s), the incredible condition of this example and the fact that it’s fully functional (as demo’ed in this YouTube video) no doubt contributed to the hefty hammer price.

The Apple I was of course the work of Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak and these “Byte Shop” machines are regarded as the turning point that made Apple Computer viable as a company.


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At the time in 1976, Jobs and Wozniak were selling a small handful of bare boards to enthusiasts. But Jobs approached Paul Terrell at the Byte Shop in Mountain View, California, an early personal computer outlet. Terrell apparently offered to buy 50 Apple I machines, but only if they came fully assembled in cases.

It’s said Jobs and Wozniak personally assembled all 200 of the original Apple I, though eventuality the Byte Shop Apple I’s were actually delivered as bare boards. Terrell nevertheless accepted them, knocking up wood cases that were a cut above the hobbyist norm.

The Apple I Byte Shop machine running the 30th Anniversary ASCII art demo. (Image credit: RR Auctions)

Whatever, that Byte Shop deal for 50 computers was absolutely critical in getting Apple over the line from being a couple of tinkerers in a garage to something resembling an actual company. “That was the biggest single episode in all of the company’s history. Nothing in subsequent years was so great and so unexpected,” Steve Wozniak later said of the deal.

And it is a pretty funky thing. It’s actually remarkable just how familiar it looks, the case and keyboard being instantly recognisable as a personal computer. Indeed, keyboards have changed remarkably little in the intervening 49 years.

Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.

It’s also not hard to imagine someone producing a hipster homebrew PC build that looked just like this original Apple I build. That said, today’s computing enthusiast might be just a touch disappointed by the specs. A maximum of 8K of onboard memory, as fitted here, and a 1 MHz CPU isn’t exactly the stuff of smooth Borderlands 4 frame rates.

Then again, watching ASCII art images of the Woz and Jobs emerge in text characters, line-by-line, on the Apple I’s screen is pretty cool and in some ways more impressive than the latest ray-traced pixel fest. At the very least, it’s awfully nostalgic, especially for someone who can very dimly remember the day his father brought an Apple II Plus back from the office. Now, whatever did happen to that…?

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September 23, 2025 0 comments
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NFT Gaming

Crypto Games Keep Shutting Down. This $500K Fund Aims to Help Players Recover

by admin September 14, 2025



In brief

  • The Crypto Gaming Recovery Fund has been set up to offer players of shuttered crypto games assets for Splinterlands.
  • A total of $500,000 worth of tokens and in-game assets are available, spread out over seven years.
  • The Splinterlands team hopes to welcome additional contributors to offer up game assets to affected players.

Blockchain games are shutting down in droves so far this year, as hype and funding fade and crypto investors turn their attention elsewhere. But one long-running crypto game hopes to draw some of those players affected by shutdowns by offering free NFT assets for affected users.

Crypto trading card game Splinterlands is inviting the players of failed blockchain games to apply to its newly formed recovery fund, in which $500,000 worth of crypto tokens and in-game assets can be unlocked over the next seven years.

The project told Decrypt that it is currently in talks with other projects based on the Hive blockchain to allocate assets to the fund—and invites the broader industry to join in to save crypto gaming by giving burned users a bridge to new games.

The Crypto Gaming Recovery Fund is already expanding. If you were impacted by one of these games and want to start a path to recovery in Splinterlands, submit a claim and we’d love to welcome you to the family! Link below: pic.twitter.com/jvAnq4JdoT

— SPSDAO (@TheSPSDAO) August 27, 2025

Currently, only the players of the defunct crypto titles Pirate Nation, Tokyo Beast, and Walking Dead: Empires can access the Crypto Gaming Recovery Fund. Affected players must create a Splinterlands account, purchase a $10 item (which provides in-game credits of the same value), and submit their wallet address containing items from eligible games—which they get to keep.

Then they can start gradually unlocking assets over the next seven years from the $500,000 fund. The assets are released as long as the player remains active on Splinterlands, which is measured by a series of monthly challenges—such as playing five battles.

“I welcome any of our competitors who would want to be a part of this to come and join. Why would they want to? Because they want to see the space grow,” Dave McCoy, Chief Operating Officer at Splinterlands, told Decrypt. “We are just the first, but hopefully we have many other people join us.”

An epidemic of crypto games shutting down has struck the industry this year, with countless notable projects closing shop. That includes Deadrop, Ember Sword, Nyan Heroes, Realms of Alurya, Symbiogenesis, Raini: The Lords of Light, and MetalCore—just to name a few. 

While all of these games have cited slightly different reasons behind their crashouts, one thing they all have in common is that they leave behind a player base with no game to play. And many of those players sunk cash into supporting the project, and are left with tokenized assets that no longer have utility.

“I’ve been in hundreds of communities over the years. […] When a project gets rugged, it’s a horrible feeling. Especially when you have high hopes for it,” Blaze, Splinterlands’ pseudonymous sales and marketing lead, told Decrypt. “We just put our foot down and said: Hey, enough is enough. Somebody has got to step up here and help these people who are getting crippled.”

The Crypto Gaming Recovery Fund is governed by a decentralized autonomous organization, or DAO, that votes on which games will be eligible for the fund. Each supported game has a specific portion of the fund that is allocated to it, although Splinterlands did not confirm the exact division per game.



In the first year, 2 million SPS tokens worth over $16,000—plus 5,000 Rebellion packs—are allocated to the fund. This scales up to 10 million SPS (currently about $82,000) and 25,000 packs by the seventh year. Rewards are then divided among the number of players that were active, meaning if only one person is active within a specific pot, then they will get everything, McCoy said.

“The design is for seven years, because we’ve been around for seven years,” McCoy explained. “So the point we’re trying to make is we’re going to be around seven more years, as well.”

Splinterlands is a strategic trading card game with NFT cards minted and tradeable on the Hive blockchain. It originally launched in 2018 as Steem Monsters—based on the Steem crypto social network—but was rebranded to Splinterlands in 2019 and has been steadily building ever since.

The game’s SPS governance token first debuted in July 2021 and quickly reached its peak of $1.07, according to CoinGecko. The token is now down 99%, however, valued at $0.008. 

McCoy told Decrypt through the game’s lifespan, it has battled its way through “everything” that a crypto game can face. He explained that “it’s not easy to manage,” and suggested that other games haven’t survived so long because of unsustainable game models—with Blaze pointing to Pirate Nation’s $150,000 per month expenses. 

Unfortunately, to McCoy, the wave of crypto game shutdowns is a necessary purge of the industry. But he hopes that the Crypto Gaming Recovery Fund is the first step to building the industry back up, potentially with more contributors alongside.

“Again, this isn’t about Splinterlands. This is about the whole industry,” McCoy told Decrypt. “If [any game] wants to be part of it, if they want to contribute, we would love to have them.”

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September 14, 2025 0 comments
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NFT Gaming

DOJ Seeks to Seize $500K in USDT from Iran Drone Supplier’s Private Wallet

by admin September 13, 2025



In brief

  • The U.S. DOJ has filed a civil forfeiture action to recover over $500,000 in USDT from an Iranian national.
  • Per the DOJ, Mohammad Abedini is founder of Iranian firm SDRA, which supplies technology used in Iran’s Shahed military drones.
  • The USDT tokens were said to be kept in an unhosted cryptocurrency wallet, posing questions over how the seizure could be effected.

The United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts has filed a civil forfeiture action to recover approximately $584,741 in Tether (USDT) stablecoins from an Iranian national who provided technology to the Iranian military.

The tokens were said to be kept in an unhosted cryptocurrency wallet, though authorities gave no further details.

Mohammad Abedini, 39, is founder and managing director of San’at Danesh Rahpooyan Aflak Co. (SDRA), an Iranian firm that supplies technology used in drones to the country’s military.

SDRA provides navigation equipment to the firm that produces Shahed drones, which have been widely used in Iran’s drone strikes, by Russia in the war in Ukraine, and by several Middle Eastern military groups.

In January 2024, three U.S. service members were killed on a military base in northern Jordan. Later analysis revealed that an Iranian Shahed UAV using SDRA’s Sepehr Navigation System was responsible for the attack, according to the DOJ.

Abedini is charged with providing material support to foreign terrorist organizations resulting in death, as well as conspiring to procure sensitive U.S. technology used in military drones. He was detained by Italian authorities in December 2024, but was released in January 2025. Per the DOJ, he is now believed to be in Iran.

According to claims from the nonprofit Iran Watch, from 2016 to 2024, Abedini and his business partner allegedly smuggled U.S.-origin electronics and technical data from American manufacturers and re-exported them from Switzerland to Iran. Because the devices were so small, they could reportedly have been carried in a suitcase. These allegations have not yet been proven.

Can the government seize crypto from private wallets?

Seizing crypto from private wallets is not straightforward. Unlike centralized exchanges such as Coinbase or Binance, there is no intermediary for governments to compel—wallet owners control their own keys. However, the U.S. government has managed to do it before.

In 2022, the DOJ seized 94,000 BTC (worth roughly $3.6 billion at the time) from Ilya Lichtenstein and Heather Morgan, who carried out the record-breaking Bitfinex hack.

According to the announcement, investigators traced the stolen Bitcoin through multiple mixers and eventually located the couple’s private keys after gaining access to an online cloud storage account.

In other instances, federal investigators have performed digital forensics on confiscated laptops in order to obtain private keys, as in the case of Silk Road founder Ross Ulbricht.

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September 13, 2025 0 comments
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NFT Gaming

Tornado Cash Devs Get $500K From Solana Policy Institute to Appeal Convictions

by admin August 28, 2025



In brief

  • The Solana Policy Institute pledged $500,000 to fund legal defenses of Tornado Cash developers Roman Storm and Alexey Pertsev, who were convicted of money laundering-related crimes.
  • The group argued that prosecuting developers for building neutral software tools creates a chilling precedent and threatens innovation, even as the Trump DOJ signaled it may stop pursuing such charges for decentralized projects.
  • The donation also shows Solana’s willingness to support Ethereum-based initiatives, countering critics who questioned whether the rival blockchain communities would unite around defending developers.

The Solana Policy Institute, a leading crypto lobbying group, announced Thursday it will donate $500,000 to aid the legal defenses of Roman Storm and Alexey Pertsev—developers of Ethereum coin mixing service Tornado Cash that were convicted of crimes in the United States and the Netherlands, respectively. 

Storm was convicted earlier this month in Manhattan for the crime of operating an illegal money transmitting business, and now faces up to five years in federal prison. Pertsev was sentenced to over five years in prison last year, after a Dutch court found him guilty of money laundering.

The legal woes of both Tornado Cash developers have, for years, triggered concern within the crypto industry and broader tech circles. Advocates have long warned that successful convictions of either man for their work on developing and maintaining the Tornado Cash platform could have major ramifications for software developers in all contexts.

“These prosecutions continue to set a chilling precedent that threatens the software development industry,” Miller Whitehouse-Levine, CEO of the Solana Policy Institute, said in a Thursday blog post announcing the donation. “If the government can prosecute developers for creating neutral tools that others misuse, it fundamentally changes developers’ risk calculus.”

Though the Trump administration has in many respects taken an aggressively pro-crypto approach since January, the president’s Department of Justice opted to press forward with criminal charges against Storm initially filed in 2023 by the Biden administration.

In an apparent shift in policy, however, a top DOJ official told an audience of crypto industry leaders last week that federal prosecutors will no longer pursue the charge they successfully convicted Storm of, against developers of “truly decentralized” software that does not take custody of user funds but is used by criminal entities to launder digital assets.



Crypto policy leaders have had to walk a tightrope as of late between applauding the Trump administration’s pro-crypto moves, and warning about the risks posed if Storm’s conviction is upheld. The true test will come during Storm’s appeal—which will clarify if the Trump DOJ has undergone any true change of heart on the subject of decentralized software developers and criminal liability.

The issue has become increasingly existential to the crypto industry as a whole. On Wednesday, 114 crypto companies and tech lobbying groups—including the Solana Policy Institute—sent a letter to the Senate Banking Committee warning they would collectively protest an upcoming crypto market structure bill if it did not explicitly exempt decentralized software developers from criminal liability on the charge the DOJ used to convict Storm. 

Today’s donation also hits on an intra-industry tension that has been brewing for some weeks. 

Tornado Cash operates on the Ethereum network, and members of the Ethereum community have long been vocal in their support of the legal defenses of Storm and Pertsev.

In recent weeks, however, some industry players—most notably, Bitcoin pioneer Erik Voorhees, the founder of crypto exchange ShapeShift and Venice AI—have questioned whether prominent boosters of Solana, long a rival network to Ethereum, would step up to support the Tornado Cash developers in the name of defending broader crypto principles.

Today’s donation by the Solana Policy Institute would appear to counter that criticism. But leadership of the organization, founded earlier this year, also has particularly deep roots in advocacy for software developers generally, and for Tornado Cash’s developers specifically.

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August 28, 2025 0 comments
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