Agreed. Looks like the saga continues.ASUS should really fire the guy that implements the storage capabilities on their routers. This is the second router that doesn't work as advertised for storage.
I would agree that the router was not really ready to ship and that it is false advertising. The shipping FW for English market (largest market most likely) was completely unusable and effectively gave you a non-functioning router out of the box. While there are workarounds a regular user should never have to resort to that for a product that is brand new. After all, would you buy a brand new car if you knew upfront that the brakes are shot and the steering wheel is missing? "No really, you can drive it, just put this metal bar through the hole in the steering column and off you go" DLNA is advertised to work out of the box as well, and it does not, and not even just that but who really has FAT32 formatted drives lying around these days to make Asus FW eng. department assume that FAT32 should be the file system to implement? FAT32, really?! Even XP machines will be running NTFS drives Just to be able to format >32GB FAT32 drive I had to use Linux (yes, I know Windows based tools exist, but that's beside the point).I'm planning on getting one soon. Sounds like this router can do exactly what I need it to do with flying colors. Although I completely see your point about the DLNA server (even though at the moment I don't use) you should not have to be a beta tester for them after spending $200 on a router. It's also false advertising.
I understand bugs happen. But looks to me like this wasn't ready to ship and they jumped the gun.
Multiple sources say that they're working on a update to fix it.
So, yeah, RT-N66U definitely not ready to ship as is IMHO. I could also say that maybe we're paying the price as early adopters, but the RT-N66U is not new technology, it's evolutionary (from RT-N56U) not revolutionary. "Early adopter" really does not apply here.