Friday, May 11, 2007
Michael Dell has earned it a place in Washington's Smithsonian National Museum of American History, the company and museum..
Michael Dell, who founded the world's number two computer seller 22 years ago with a paltry 1,000 dollars in his pocket, donated to the premier US history museum a collection of computer-related materials that "provide insight into Dell's career as entrepreneur and business leader and Dell Inc, as a global company," according to a statement.
The items include a PC's Limited computer from 1985 -- when Dell began assembling his own computers under that name -- and a top-notch 2005 Dell OptiPlex GX520 produced at the Dell plant in North Carolina.
"Dell Inc. is an outstanding example of a modern American company succeeding in a global marketplace," said museum director Brent Glass.
To obtain the long-obsolete PC's Limited machine, Dell had to find a family in North Carolina that still had one -- and trade it for a brand new Dell model, which is thousands of times more powerful.
"We are proud that Dell is becoming part of the Smithsonian and part of our country's history," said Dell.
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