You people are still overreacting. And you still don't know that the 1 standard obligation for a pre-order is that you will get the product when you are told you will.
The entirety of your anger is dependent on the fact that you also think pre-ordering means you get the product before B&M. That's your mistake. I am simply amazed, because I have pre-ordered so many different products online that ended up coming to me a few days after they were available in B&M. I am used to it and a weathered consumer who knows that can happen. So either you people have never shopped online before or you have had the 1 in a million experience of always buying from a company that also as a practice delivers online pre-orders specifically before B&M purchases can be made. What is it? I mean, I have heard of stories of people getting online pre-orders after B&M, read forum posts of many different products of the same thing, and personally experienced it myself so many times that it's just a part of what I know about the online buying experience. BIG name companies too, the size of a company has not had an effect in my experience on whether or not they follow that additional practice.
It took me awhile, and I re-watched the Google Keynote announcing the Nexus 7 device, how much it cost, what came with it, and where you can get it. Hugo Barra says the when you
PURCHASE (
not pre-order) a Nexus 7 device, all the goodies ($25 credit, movie, songs, mags, book) come with your device. I, like most other people thought that the $25 credit came as a perk of pre-ordering, but it happened that I was wrong about this. (I have this image in my head of Google employees nudging each other, snickering about how all the posters have the wrong idea in their head of how the launch was supposed to go down)
Mind you, this launch could have went a lot better. Several months ago, BioWare's Star Wars MMORPG had a very complex launch, that could have went super ugly. There were different rumors all over the place on who was going to get access first. But you know what made it a successful launch? Communication. The SWTOR customer service was great at answering questions, on the phone and via Twitter. They even squashed down false rumors and let people know in the most fair and direct way of how the launch was planned out. Had Google decided not to be so coy,vague, and evasive, perhaps so many people wouldn't have felt slighted. I myself, realized that at the end of it, Google did not back out of anything they promised. Maybe they led people on further than they should, and get carried away with their assumptions (mine was the day that you received your device, was reflective on when you pre-ordered) But lesson learned. If Google decides to launch another piece of hardware, maybe they might realize constant, updated communication can build up good customer relations.