I used to think museums were the only right place for historic items, and 
despite being a collector myself, I used to kind of not love things 
disappearing into private collections.  But I realize now private collections 
are a fairly efficient, cost effective and safe way for things to be preserved. 
 Museums often end up storing a lot of what they have anyway so it's not like 
it's any more accessible.  Plus with private collections artifacts are 
distributed all over the place, so things survive despite disasters here and 
there.Sent from my Galaxy
-------- Original message --------From: Mike Katz via cctalk 
<cctalk@classiccmp.org> Date: 2024-08-29  9:04 a.m.  (GMT-08:00) To: "General 
Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts" <cctalk@classiccmp.org> Cc: Mike Katz 
<bit...@12bitsbest.com> Subject: [cctalk] Re: LCM auction Unless the museum has 
an large enough endowment to take care of itself and grow it will fail.I'm sure 
even the Smithsonian discards items that is can no longer afford to house.  And 
that is after it has sat in storage for years.Whether publicly, privately or 
government funded expenses and the need for space and man power always 
increase.Maybe we need a new law, we will call it Allen's law and it is 
directly related to Moore's law.  As computers become obsolete faster and 
faster the space, time and money to preserve them increases respectively.On 
8/29/2024 10:48 AM, Paul Koning via cctalk wrote:>>> On Aug 29, 2024, at 10:45 
AM, John Foust via cctalk <cctalk@classiccmp.org> wrote:>>>> At 07:11 AM 
8/29/2024, cz via cctalk wrote:>>> The purpose of a museum is to destroy 
history.>> Ridiculous.  Do the math.  If there was a computer so magical and 
historically>> significant because only 100 of them were made, and 95 of them 
were scrapped long>> ago by individual and corporate owners, and one made it 
into a "museum,">> why aren't you equally blaming the people who tossed the 95? 
 At least>> the museum tried to save it.> Did it, though?  The attempt may have 
been made by the collector who donated it, and the museum may be the one who 
reneged on the commitment to preserve.>>     paul>

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