Reply 940 of 1028, by midicollector
Sorry if I started a larger debate here, I was honestly just curious about the K5.
I don't have a problem with people paying a lot of money for things. I have a good job, so I understand it. For the most part, it never seems to be the things I have an interest in anyway, so it doesn't tend to affect me much. I tend to be pleasantly surprised when the things that are super rare that I really want are also dirt cheap (which happens more often than you might think, probably 90% of the time). For example, if I was going to buy a processor, the one that I really want and love that means a lot to me personally is still going for like $5-20. The entire processor market is still dirt cheap, so the 100% collectors are not actually affecting us retro computing lovers much.
It is interesting how different people are different kinds of collectors. Like, I'd maybe call myself a "collector" but I am actually pretty picky about what I get, and I have no interest in owning 100% of a thing. Quite the opposite, I don't even have room for a lot of the stuff I have! I try to only buy the things that are really meaningful to me that I really love, or that I really want. I'm just a different kind of collector than the 100% type people. Nothing wrong with other styles of collecting though! I don't want anyone to think I'm putting anything else down.
Again, nothing wrong with people paying money for what they want, I get it. There have been occasions where I've over paid on something because I really wanted it, and I never regretted it. I have to admit that there are things I bought because I was afraid that one day they would be unaffordable because of collectors, but I still don't have anything against it. I'm a collector too after all.
Just make sure that if you are a 100% type collector that your stuff ends up in the hands of other collectors (and not in the trash) when you pass away one day!