Close Menu

    Subscribe to our newsletter

    Get the latest Geekhub updates.

    Saturday, February 28
    Geekhub
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • About us
    • News
    • Technology

      Hisense Tevolution Museum: A Celebration Of Innovation Not To Be Missed

      Hisense25 February 2026

      OPPO Reno 15 Pro 5G — Review

      20 February 2026

      Huawei’s Code4Mzansi Wants South African Developers to Build for the Real World

      19 February 2026

      Meta Eyes 2026 Launch for First AI Smartwatch

      19 February 2026

      Apple Wants to Put AI on Your Face, in Your Ears, and Around Your Neck

      19 February 2026
    • Opinion

      Nostalgia Isn’t a Business Plan: The Truth About 90s Reboots

      11 February 2026

      Convenience vs connection: The Problem With “Smart” Technology

      11 February 2026

      The Uncomfortable Truth Told By Movie Villains

      10 February 2026

      Valentine’s Day: Commercial Fluff Without The Love

      4 February 2026

      The Science Behind Iron Man’s Suit: Could It Actually Work?

      22 January 2026
    • Movies & TV

      Bromance at the End of the World: First Thoughts on Project Hail Mary

      26 February 2026

      Sinners Is Not Just Breaking Records — It’s Changing the Conversation

      23 February 2026

      From Live Action to Animation: Venom Is Being Reinvented

      23 February 2026

      Toy Story 5: Can Imagination Survive the Digital Age?

      20 February 2026

      A Different Kind of Resurrection: The Mummy (2026)

      19 February 2026
    • Hardware

      Samsung Galaxy S26 series lands in South Africa and its all very familiar

      25 February 2026

      HONOR Magic V6 : What we know so far about HONOR’s next-gen foldable

      25 February 2026

      HONOR Magic8 Pro launches in South Africa with big AI promises and a serious night photography flex

      25 February 2026

      Review: Honor X9d 5G – A Truly Tough Mid-Ranger

      23 February 2026

      OPPO Reno 15 Pro 5G — Review

      20 February 2026
    • Get In Touch
    Geekhub
    Home » Apple Lisa: The $10,000 Computer Apple Destroyed by the Thousands
    News

    Apple Lisa: The $10,000 Computer Apple Destroyed by the Thousands

    Staff WriterBy Staff Writer21 July 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email WhatsApp Copy Link

    You won’t believe what Apple did to 7,000 of its own computers

    In 1983, Apple dropped a computer so far ahead of its time, nobody was ready for it. The Apple Lisa had a graphical interface, a mouse, multitasking, protected memory — things we take for granted today. But it came with one fatal flaw: a $10,000 price tag. That’s like buying a Mac Pro today and not getting a display.

    Lisa bombed. Hard. By the time Apple moved on to the Macintosh, thousands of unsold units were sitting in storage collecting dust. Most companies would write them off. One guy saw an opportunity.

    Meet Bob Cook. Tech recycler. Visionary. Unlucky.

    In the mid-80s, Bob Cook ran a company called Sun Remarketing in Utah. He had a thing for failed tech, and he saw Lisa not as a relic but a goldmine. He bought 7,000 units directly from Apple. That’s right — thousands of brand-new, boxed Lisas at a massive discount.

    But Cook didn’t just flip them. He invested over $200,000 upgrading the machines, rebranding them as the Lisa Professional, and building a market for them among education institutions and collectors. For a while, it worked. He turned a flop into a functional machine with a second life.

    Then Apple came knocking.

    September 1989: The day the Lisas died

    Out of nowhere, Apple demanded all remaining Lisa units be returned. No explanation. No backroom drama. Just a phone call, a truck, and a contract clause they decided to enforce.

    What happened next is the kind of thing that would have Reddit forums fuming today.

    Apple collected 2,700 remaining Lisas and took them to a landfill in Logan, Utah. And crushed them. Every last one.

    Not resold. Not recycled. Not donated. Just obliterated.

    Why would Apple destroy perfectly good computers?

    No official reason was ever given, but we can make some educated guesses.

    • Image control: Apple has always been about tightly managing perception. A bunch of outdated machines floating around in 1989 didn’t fit the clean, forward-looking brand they were building.
    • Steve Jobs’ pride: Jobs reportedly hated the Lisa by that point. He considered it a blemish, not a badge of honor.
    • Customer support headache: Apple didn’t want to deal with software, drivers, or complaints from people using ten-year-old hardware in a new era.
    • Apple being Apple: Control has always been part of the company’s DNA. They don’t just own the tech, they try to control the ecosystem long after it’s sold.

    The environmental hypocrisy

    Fast-forward to today, and Apple is singing the green gospel. Recycled aluminum, carbon-neutral products, and trade-in programs. Great. But in 1989, they sent truckloads of usable tech to the dump without blinking.

    If this happened now, the PR backlash would be massive. Back then, nobody batted an eye. That’s the wild part.

    So what’s the lesson here?

    If you’re in the tech game — whether as a reseller, collector, or enthusiast — remember this: the manufacturer always holds the power. Even when you think you’ve got a good deal, they can swoop in and end the party. Ask Bob Cook.

    This story isn’t just about crushed computers. It’s about how fragile innovation can be when legacy, ego, and control get in the way. The Lisa wasn’t a failure of technology. It was a failure of timing, pricing, and, ultimately, corporate culture.

    Today, surviving Lisa units are collector’s items. But 2,700 of them? They’re buried in a landfill under layers of dirt, bad decisions, and corporate paranoia.

    TL;DR for the Geekhub crowd

    YearWhat happened
    1983Apple launches the Lisa. It’s expensive and bombs.
    1986Bob Cook buys 7,000 units to refurbish and resell.
    1989Apple demands return of remaining stock.
    Same yearThey crush and bury 2,700 Lisa units in Utah.
    TodayApple talks green, but that landfill still exists.

    This isn’t just lost tech. It’s a reminder that owning hardware doesn’t always mean owning the future. Especially when the company that made it decides you don’t get to.

    Welcome to tech history, Apple-style.

    Apple Apple Lisa
    Follow For The Latest Updates Follow For The Latest Updates
    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp
    Staff Writer

    Related Posts

    Robert De Niro Speaks Out Against Trump Administration

    26 February 2026

    Jeffrey Epstein: A PR Strategy To Manage Public Outrage

    25 February 2026

    Cape Town to Pilot Electric Buses on MyCiTi Network

    5 February 2026
    Opinion

    Nostalgia Isn’t a Business Plan: The Truth About 90s Reboots

    11 February 2026

    Convenience vs connection: The Problem With “Smart” Technology

    11 February 2026

    The Uncomfortable Truth Told By Movie Villains

    10 February 2026

    Valentine’s Day: Commercial Fluff Without The Love

    4 February 2026
    Don't Miss
    Movies & TV

    Bromance at the End of the World: First Thoughts on Project Hail Mary

    Shana Mohamed26 February 2026

    Early reactions to Project Hail Marycall it dazzling, emotional and unexpectedly human, with Gosling bonding with a rock alien.

    Robert De Niro Speaks Out Against Trump Administration

    26 February 2026

    Samsung Galaxy S26 series lands in South Africa and its all very familiar

    25 February 2026

    Hisense Tevolution Museum: A Celebration Of Innovation Not To Be Missed

    Hisense25 February 2026
    About Us
    About Us

    Geekhub was not created as a business and we are not journalists, we are just a bunch of geeks that love what we do and we share our collective passion with you, our valued readers.

    Contact: +27 83 346 2178

    Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn
    Our Picks

    Bromance at the End of the World: First Thoughts on Project Hail Mary

    26 February 2026

    Robert De Niro Speaks Out Against Trump Administration

    26 February 2026

    Samsung Galaxy S26 series lands in South Africa and its all very familiar

    25 February 2026
    Most Popular

    AI and The Cost Of Convenience: What are we really giving up?

    27 November 2025

    OPPO Reno 12Pro 5G- A beautiful Mid-range Contender

    14 August 2024

    Huawei’s AI Chip Challenge: A David vs. Goliath Showdown?

    15 August 2024
    • Home
    • Terms of Service
    • Geekhub Editorial Policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Get In Touch
    © 2026 Geekhub.co.za All Rights Reserved!

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.