Still have mine. Still operational. Upgraded to the max. With the analog TV, FM, CD, iTunes 1 and a digital IO card the Twentieth Anniversary Macintosh (TAM) was my main machine for 5 years. Mastered a lot of live performance music CDs on it. Won't run MacOS X, so I was forced to upgrade hardware.
Fortunately I waited until Jobs' flushed them TAMs for $2000 employee price as he expunged all sign of Amelio from Apple. A solid machine at $2K, WAY overpriced at $7.5 K, even with concierge 24/7 onsite support. Today it's worth under $650 USD based on hardware functionality.
That kegger in the auction is the subwoofer for the Bose home theatre sound system. I kept mine under the desk. The keyboard did suck total ass. I'd use anything else handy, rather than the piece of **** it shipped with. Note the tracball and white keyboards present for this experiment.
Hey MS Windowss: Note that this was 1997, and using up to 16 screens on one system had been literally plug-and play on MacOS since System 6.0.3 in 1989. Microsoft was simply unable to do that in 1989, Win95, Win98, NT, ME; even Win 2000 chokes on multiple monitors with different vendor video cards. Working at NVIDIA opened my eyes to many things Apple (NeXT, BeOS) did better than Microsoft, still does better than Winblows.
:fencing: