Chaos Disciple said:
Personally I feel a little disturbed that a publisher feels like they should charge a lot for a pdf. As far as I can tell a pdf. holds no market value because they can be replicated and distributed with very little or no effeort or resources. In my opinion this infinite supply is a problem and basically makes them worthless.
.......They're selling copies of their work, that they make for a living. Just because it isn't printed on dead trees doesn't make the actual literary work less valuable. It should be somewhat cheaper, for sure, as it avoids some of the production costs (printing and distribution), but it still incurs a tiny bit of server cost, and still has the full value of the original intellectual property itself.
Sure, people with no morals and an excessive sense of entitlement could go to some lengths to copy PDFs and distribute those not-paid-for copies, but just because some jerks do that doesn't make it right, nor does it make the actual paid-for copies any less valuable (taking pirated work is as morally reprehensible as pirating it in the first place, anyway).
Legitimate customers are at least supporting the writers by paying for the original work, which allows those writers to afford producing game products in the first place. Paying the normal price for a PDF product supports the writers as much as paying normal price for the printed version, and thereby supports the hobby; those who don't pay are denying the authors fair compensation for their work, and as such are not supporting the hobby.
The PDF version is just less convenient for those of us who can't/don't have laptops to lug around to every game session and work on at random times and places, when inspiration strikes or we have the spare time to do some work on our campaigns, or to read up on new rules material we might use. But it's still convenient for some other people, and still has the full amount of rules material, descriptive text, and background info to use it.
(quick edit: in other words, the last point is why I don't bother with PDFs except for errata, and why I don't expect to be supporting the Digital Initiative; I'd rather have physical copies at hand to read when I feel like it, not when I have a moment of computer time. And my printer is not a reliable piece of junk, so I'd rather not even try printing anything except necessary documents and schoolwork. I only use what I pay for and I'd rather not pay for something I couldn't print without lots of junk-printer problems and a wasted ink cartridge; and my current printer is actually new, but like all printers of mine, is somehow cursed to be inexplicably bothersome and, half the time, inexplicably nonfunctional)