I was hoping this might be a place A) to discuss our own collections and B) where discussing older startups, such as Thinking Machines and NeXT, would be kosher.
Anyway, the biggest loss for me when I was beaten and robbed in the Tenderloin in December was the loss of my Thinking Machines windbreaker and NeXT pin. I hope the responsible assault participant truly needed them more than me and is enjoying them.
I would have a bit more respect for them if that was the case - sadly, however, I am fairly certain they were after the cash I had just withdrawn for a local charity and my rent.
Really the most frustrating bit is that SFPD has the video, their names and a last known location which I believe to still be accurate. They continue to claim to be "too busy" to investigate the matter. Since I was "jumped" we believe they've attacked at least 3 others, including two elderly women, one of whom was still in intensive care as of last week.
The SFPD seems genuinely uninterested in dealing with anything short of murder. Bike or safeway theft rings, out of control vehicle break-ins. SF feels like such a hellhole sometimes.
I haven't been to the Tenderloin since I moved to the Bay - is it as bad as people say? I thought it wasn't so much violent crime as daylight drug taking etc...
This was my first bad experience and honestly what's soured me is the police response, not what happened on Eddy or how I feel when I visit after the fact.
Twitch had the purple hoodie in a specific color that a few streamers paid $1k to get as it signified you were a partner (top tier streamer) or an employee. We had an event before PAX at a Game Works and for 100k tickets you could get a hoodie in that make/color. Streamers were frantically playing the ticket games to get 100k before midnight, it actually messed with the event a bit as they weren't socalizing.
When I was at Oracle, it was easier to buy Oracle swag from ebay than figure out how to get it internally... (Granted this likely differs a lot by business unit.)
I ran a large Java Users Group for several years when Java was part of Sun Micro and a handful of years after the transition to Oracle. I used to get swag for my members and did giveaways at meetings. I can say that Sun sent me jackets, shirts, books, you name it - once it turned over to Oracle, I had a hard time getting much.
> I can say that Sun sent me jackets, shirts, books, you name it - once it turned over to Oracle, I had a hard time getting much.
It seems like Sun just had a ton of swag. I was at a TopCoder event and chatted with a Sun rep who was fiddling with his laptop; I noted he had a neat USB hub with a Sun logo on it (pretty small, but I think it might only do usb 1), and he gave it to me. I suspect there was an overflowing bin of them back at the office.
The best Sun swag I ever got was the leather Java jacket. I wore it once on a subway and kept getting asked how to get one by Java coders so I gave it away to a coworker for my peace of mind and privacy. EDIT: I wasn't even a Java coder at that time - I was sysadmin on Solaris machines, but swag is swag.
I acquired a Sun mug and card deck from a discard pile at an internship about 7 years ago, a few years after the acquisition by Oracle. Also in the pile was a mug with the pre-merger/acquisition Broadcom big sinc function logo. Glad to see this post that I'm not alone with a small collection of vintage tech swag. (Now I just need to find a Wang Laboratories bag like an older prof proudly carried around...)
I used to work with someone who was a former Enron employee. The day they let everyone go, he went and cleaned out the swag closet and made a bunch of money reselling it all on eBay.
For t-shirts you'd have better luck at places like vintage by the pound in San Francisco if you're looking for stuff from the .com boom. If you're not local to the area you might contact a boutique vintage store and tell them exactly what you're looking for.
Unique Thrift in Merrifield VA outside of Washington DC has a huge bag section that usually has stuff from various "beltway bandit" companies. I've collected a dozen pieces of swag for Northrop Grumman, General Dynamics, Gartner, IBM, Cisco, VMware...
I recall there was a guy on HN that had a hobby of collecting swag from notorious bankrupt companies. Enron coffee mugs, Webvan T shirts, etc. Apparently Theranos stuff is hot these days on ebay.
You can find old logo, obscure internal project or team name t-shirts of Google and Facebook with little to no effort if you can visit thrift stores in Bay Area or Seattle.
Every single time I stop by a Goodwill or Savers to drop off things, I go inside to check if I can find some vintage tech books. Every single time, in almost every store, on my way to the the bookshelves, I caught glimpses of t-shirts or fancier puff jackets clad with FB, Google, Twitter, Netflix, Dropbox logos.
"founder" of startupschwag here ( https://techcrunch.com/2007/09/03/return-of-the-schwag/ ) - passed the torch to a guy about 10 years ago - would be happy to talk about how to bring it back, at the time the addressable market seemed... small.
I still have a few kozmo tshirts from '99 around here somewhere =)
all credit goes to valley schwag for the original concept - they went on to better things (getsatisfaction.com) - but as a subscriber to that service, I inadvertently received a cc'd (instead of bcc'd) list of 500 of their subscribers, and when valley schwag shut down, I reached out to those past subs and TechCrunch to bring it back!
Somewhere I have some Cascade coffee mugs and a couple of HubSpot shirts. You'd have to be a bit old-school to recognize Cascade or the logo[0]. HubSpot is (I think) more well-known.
My company just got acquired, all our branding will eventually go away. Can't get too doxxy; HQ is in San Jose. I have a few items I'm getting rid of, I was thinking of you (or another collecter in your space) about exactly this topic when I heard about the acquisition.
Somewhere I have a pair of Google "I'm Feeling Lucky" boxers and a Napster t-shirt. For older things, I have a Sun Microsystems koozie in an absolutely hideous purple and gold color.
Ah, I wonder what happened to my old IFL boxers...I've still got dozens of different Google t-shirts and some Alphabet-related hoodies, baseball caps, fleece, a scarf, a raincoat, and snow hats. I think the beach towels, water bottles, and flip-flops are all gone now. Still have my lava lamp =*).
The best schwag I've gotten is probably my daypacks [2 companies].
Anyway, the biggest loss for me when I was beaten and robbed in the Tenderloin in December was the loss of my Thinking Machines windbreaker and NeXT pin. I hope the responsible assault participant truly needed them more than me and is enjoying them.