Bug Greg's Generous Contributor Pricing - Get 5 Years for the Price of 4!

  • Thread starter Thread starter Hootenanny
  • Start date Start date
AI Thread Summary
Greg is offering a promotional contributor pricing where users can get five years of contributor status for £30.99, which is marketed as the price of four years. The current yearly rate is £9.99, making the total for four years £39.69, highlighting a significant discount. Users are excited about the deal and jokingly suggest taking advantage of it for even longer terms. The discussion emphasizes the perceived generosity of Greg's pricing strategy. Overall, this pricing offer has sparked enthusiasm among contributors.
Hootenanny
Staff Emeritus
Science Advisor
Gold Member
Messages
9,621
Reaction score
9
Not sure whether this is intentional or not, but Greg seems to have become a little over-generous!

The current yearly contributor rate is £9.99.

The five-yearly rate is £30.99 and claims to give you five years of contributor status for the price of four. However, 4*£9.99 = £39.69 - BARGAIN! Let's all sign up for 50 years before Greg notices :-p
 
Physics news on Phys.org
I want to thank those members who interacted with me a couple of years ago in two Optics Forum threads. They were @Drakkith, @hutchphd, @Gleb1964, and @KAHR-Alpha. I had something I wanted the scientific community to know and slipped a new idea in against the rules. Thank you also to @berkeman for suggesting paths to meet with academia. Anyway, I finally got a paper on the same matter as discussed in those forum threads, the fat lens model, got it peer-reviewed, and IJRAP...
About 20 years ago, in my mid-30s (and with a BA in economics and a master's in business), I started taking night classes in physics hoping to eventually earn the science degree I'd always wanted but never pursued. I found physics forums and used it to ask questions I was unable to get answered from my textbooks or class lectures. Unfortunately, work and life got in the way and I never got further the freshman courses. Well, here it is 20 years later. I'm in my mid-50s now, and in a...
Back
Top