LOL it is like ready old Computer adds from amil order comapanies. the format is the same the prices are the same only the product picture is different.
:-)
LOL it is like ready old Computer adds from amil order comapanies. the format is the same the prices are the same only the product picture is different.
:-)
i would LOVE to be able to download my issues in .pdf format as well as get them in the mail. i travel alot, so that would mean less paper weight in my carry on
Wow, those Yokohama 008's were the end of my being able to show up at an event on regular street tires and expect to win. Those and the Comp TA R1's were the beginning of the end for true street tires in stock classes.
Tim, is it bad form to request a free issue when I sign up for the electronic version if I'm already a subscriber? All my issues get sent home, I don't see them till I come home--I usually get three at a time!
mtn wrote: Tim, is it bad form to request a free issue when I sign up for the electronic version if I'm already a subscriber?
I actually left the free issue box checked by mistake and noticed it as I clicked enter. I felt like a jerk.
jstein77 wrote: Can you do number 2 also?
You didn't mean for that to turn out like that, did you...
Woody wrote:mtn wrote: Tim, is it bad form to request a free issue when I sign up for the electronic version if I'm already a subscriber?I actually left the free issue box checked by mistake and noticed it as I clicked enter. I felt like a jerk.
Don't feel like a jerk. Just give it to someone who you think may be interested. Maybe you'll find a new customer for them.
2002maniac wrote: I was two years old
OT but...
2002maniac, I like your avatar. Is that an actual papercraft you can download somewhere or just a random pic?
TJ wrote: Anyone else running tires that were advertised in the first issue?
I ran 008 Yokos on my F-Prepared 240Z before switching to Goodyear slicks.
Marjorie Suddard wrote:suprf1y wrote:We did not! We got our friends to write them. FWIW, I TOLD Tim it was weird to have letters. He said people wouldn't know they could write in unless they saw them. What did we know? We were a couple of <25s sitting in the spare room of a rental house. (And given that, what did we have to lose?!) Margiestuart in mn wrote: I'm trying to figure out how there were letters to the editor and tech questions in the first issue.They just made them up, like they do now.
I'm joking, of course.
I've always wondered. In order to start a magazine, how much content do you need in the bank at any given time?
SupraWes wrote: I have had good luck getting rid of spare GRM's on the registration table at events.
I've had a few stolen on the train whie I nap. It would be nice if they let me finish first.
I know you're joking, Suprf1y... and that you're right!
As for what editorial you need in the bank to start a magazine, uh... nothing. At least, that's what we had. We made an issue, went and drank waayy too much with our friends to celebrate the night we got it back from the printer, then woke up the next morning with gummy mouths, ferocious headaches and the dawning realization that now we had to do it all over again, and in much less time. And that was the day we started to become "grown ups."
Margie
Marjorie Suddard wrote: I know you're joking, Suprf1y... and that you're right! As for what editorial you need in the bank to start a magazine, uh... nothing. At least, that's what we had. We made an issue, went and drank waayy too much with our friends to celebrate the night we got it back from the printer, then woke up the next morning with gummy mouths, ferocious headaches and the dawning realization that now we had to do it all over again, and in much less time. And that was the day we started to become "grown ups." Margie
What an awesomely momentous and at the same time E36M3-tty day that mustve been. I bet it was hard to know that morning what your lives were going to transform into over the next qtr century...
FWIW Margie, I think its FRIGGIN AWESOME that you remember lil tidbits like the letters thing from way back when. Thats the kinda stuff that makes this forum and readership feel more like family than its supposed to
Marjorie Suddard wrote: I know you're joking, Suprf1y... and that you're right! As for what editorial you need in the bank to start a magazine, uh... nothing. At least, that's what we had. We made an issue, went and drank waayy too much with our friends to celebrate the night we got it back from the printer, then woke up the next morning with gummy mouths, ferocious headaches and the dawning realization that now we had to do it all over again, and in much less time. And that was the day we started to become "grown ups." Margie
What I find funny is Tim's attitude about the whole thing, even today (I got to talk to him for a minute at The Mitty). He still sounds like he's absolutely amazed that it's successful, and worried that the whole thing will go belly-up tomorrow. There's no Charles Foster Kane hiding inside that man, is there..
I'm so proud of y'all. Yeah, I've never done anything to help but subscribe from time to time (and as a corner worker, handed over some issues to the spectators that mentioned they would "..love to race, if it wasn't so expensive.."), but all of us in SEDIV SCCA back then thought of "that little magazine from Florida" as our own.
Oh, yah..that reminds me..my subscription to CM is expiring, I guess I better go renew that.
Thanks guys and as an aside, we have no intention of just going digital, or in fact even a second digital edition right now. This is just an experiment with this new technology, We want to see, on a one time basis, how you, our present and future readers respond. I see this as more of a marketing tool for the magazine, as it is way cheaper and easier to send out digital samples, than actual samples. If this ever did become a regular thing, I see readers reading the paper version and then using the digital version to check out the cool videos that will be embedded and also to order stuff from advertisers, as ads will be hot linked to websites.
We will see, as we live in an ever changing world!
Woody wrote: Wow, I didn't realize that you could buy a new TVR in the US 25 years ago. Of course, not many people did....
I remember when the Tasmin first came out. V6 Ford, etc.
That whole issue was pretty cool. Strange to see ads without a Web address in them, I guess folks didn't expect instant gratification back then.
As a fairly recent (last five years) reader and current 10-yr. subscriber, it's cool to see how far things have come. I'll cast my vote for staying with a print version, as they're always fun reading from time to time. Looking forward to trying digital too, though, as it offers so much more room for mixing media/technology (as Tim alluded to).
It's funny reading a lot of people saying that they leave issues at doctor's offices, etc. to try to get new subscribers. I find myself doing the same (I have the long-term sub and one from NASA). I can't think of any other non-automotive business that I so readily promote, but this magazine seems to do that.
This could easily turn into a rant on the importance of small entrepreneurial business and the lack of Gov't/tax support, but I'll leave it alone. Suffice it to say I'm glad I found GRM and will be reading, in whatever format it's produced, for a very long time.
You'll need to log in to post.