I see there is still the webpage for the
Powerpack download zone when looking at
Your services from the
You tab/link at the
forum. 
However, it just seems to contain the public isos.

I agree, once expectations have been created, it's necessary to fulfill them and/or keep everyone up-to-date about the realities. Nothing good comes from unfulfilled expectations, afaik.
OTOH, I remember a conversation with Denis Havlik at the first mandrakeforum.com, back in the last year of last millennium. I was using Mandrake for, essentially, all my computing needs; it was an integral part of my business and personal life. To me, this makes it one of the products I consume, something for which, in the case of all other products, I provide compensation from the larder of my vast, hard-earned wealth. I asked Denis whether some sort of electronic payment means could be established. He said, "That sounds like fun" and I'm sure something like that was already on his mind; I think the Club was his baby.
I did not agree with the original name of this portal for compensation, "Donations". When I pay for other goods and services, charity doesn't enter into the equation. However, there it was, better than nothing. Unfortunately, hordes of leechers, who were attracted to Linux primarily because they could get it for free and lord their l33t skilz over their luser friends, completely missed the value of FOSS, calling Mandrake beggars. Next, came the store and Powerpack, the idea you should get more for your money than merely a very capable distribution that is, nowadays, at the core of day-to-day life for many. It's too bad. I've said before the challenge is to create a working business model for FOSS but I believe unrealistic expectations have been created by the paths Mandrake/Mandriva have followed.
I think I can blame the dot.com bubble, a little. Gael Duval and his partners tried to distribute a fork of Red Hat and, afaict, they were inspired by the spirit of the genesis and rapid evolution of Linux, truly an internet phenomenon. From here, it looked like investment capitalists, interested only in ROI instead of the unique philosophy of the free operating system, flooded Linux with cash, and that was handled badly by developer-founders. From then on, the company has gone through crisis after crisis, management after management. I've learned not to expect so much from the management and, so far, have had a productive relationship with the distro. I continue to maintain a PowerPack subscription, recognizing it as a way to pay for the work that goes into the product, not so much interested in the symbolic goodies. 11 years ago, I was hoping to see the role of "compensation" or "monetary contribution" become the accepted way of looking at making modest cash infusions, many small increments to make a successful company.
In a way, capitalism poisoned Linux. Largely, the user-base consists of leechers hanging from the teats of angels like Shuttleworth, expecting the product for free, criticizing attempts to build a commercial model. The role of freedom seems to have been deprecated. As in love, there is only money.
