Widowmaker said:
No offense but Iron_Chef you sound bitter and jaded. You got the pdf. version be happy with that.
I am bitter and jaded.

No offense, but I don't understand your attitude. Would you be happy paying $115 for a pdf?
I did get my hardcopy of AGOT (very late) and my pdf--in fact, it was me who made such a fuss to Mark that he finally gave us the pdf because the hardcopies were so late. It was also me who demanded (and got) pdfs of the bonus gifts released--without which DLE preorder customers would have been completely shafted. But I never get any credit! Because that would mean the power was in the hands of the consumer, rather than the lord and master publisher being free to abuse his customers and hand out crumbs whenever he felt generous.
Let's face it: Most people are perfectly happy being sheep no matter how many times they get fleeced, but not me. I won't stand for it and I will lead the charge for consumer rights every time my rights are violated--no matter how many others mindlessly suckup to the very people ripping them off! These sheep gladly drink the contemptuous spit the publisher rains down upon them and then villify me for getting them what they paid for, LOL. They'll take any excuse, no matter how lame (the dog ate my company)--heck, they'll even take no excuse at all! They'll just smile and say, "Oh, well--I hope I get what I paid for someday!"
I don't get it. I've been in business long enough to know you don't treat customers that way and I've been ripped-off often enough to know what to do about it. You shine a great big light on the subject, so the rip-off artist has nowhere left to hide and must start complying with your demands or else give up the ghost.
I remember I started a business once because I'd been ripped off by a total scumbag idiot who lied and cheated me and refused to make it right. I started a competing business and badmouthed him everywhere I could, along with his rip-off buddies running similar businesses. My smear campaign (and superior customer service) worked, because I'd driven him and several of his buddies out of business within 6 months to a year. Eventually, I crushed nearly all of my competition and delighted in their downfalls, not only for my bottom line, but because I had cleaned up the market and made it safer for consumers. Eventually, all good things come to an end, and 10 years later when I had to bankrupt the business (due to changing market conditions that made it untenable), I made sure I didn't rip-off any of my customers or freelancers--without whom, I would never would have had the success that I enjoyed.
PS: I think it was Palladium who was very upfront about their problems and handled it well, raising $100k in short order to keep going. GoO should have taken a lesson in how not to go under from Kevin Siembieda instead of clamming up.