1. Why you never moved to a subscription model?
Why ASUS doesn't contract you directly?
What do you love about creating Merlin firmware?
How many hours a week do you think you spend on this firmware/forum?
Do you have any expansion plans for the future?
(I'm NOT a software engineer)
Not really all that surprising to me. I've always been a tinkerer of sorts, with both hardware and software. I've written a number of groundbreaking programs that were very specific to a particular industry, completely on my own as sole coder. I've been in IT since I was 15 (56 now - so 40+ years), but never technically hired or titled as a software engineer (or programmer,....) and never took a programming course despite being proficient in at least 15 programming languages. In all honesty, you only need about 20% of the skill set to take professional level code and tweak it compared to coding a huge project from scratch. Particularly when you consider that whole teams of experts in various bits and pieces work on most commercial projects.Really??
Now I have one more question if I may ask? Whats your educational background?
Whats your educational background?
What do you think is the reason behind Asus closing down thier code day by day? Illegal forks of Asuswrt running on non Asus devices?
And do you still get test devices from them whenever they launch a new product?
Between you and Asus's engineers, who made the first contact? Did they approach you directly? Or you tried to reach out to them first. And when was the first time you started talking with them?
My memory is a bit fuzzy as that was a long time ago, but if I remember correctly, I first contacted their tech support a few weeks after getting my RT-N66U, back in 2012 as I saw it supported Optware, but only partially, and wanted to ask them about that. When later on I posted a bugfix on their forums about something unrelated, I got contacted by their Customer Loyalty group (which were kinda Asus's social media interaction team at the time, they were posting on various forums) telling me their dev team were aware of my project, and also thanking me for a fix I had posted, and to look at their next release notes for a special "thank you" note.
So I'd say that, generally speaking, they are the ones who first got in touch with me specifically about my project, after they had seen my interactions about it on their VIP Forums (that was before the move to SNBForums).
Over time, my primary contact went from that CL representative to a product manager back at Asus USA, and then to the Asuswrt project manager back at Taiwan HQ (among other things - he seems to carry a lot of different hats within their networking division). That PM still remains my primary contact within the company, although I occasionally interact directly with some of their engineers now. Sometimes I reach out to them with a question/bugfix/bugreport, sometimes they are the ones contacting me asking me about something I did, or to inform me of an important coming change.
My sincere apology for being late to the party. I would like to add my name to the chorus of praise for your many and exemplary efforts. Thank you so much!Yesterday was Asuswrt-Merlin's 8th anniversary. The first release was on April 5th 2012.
Thread starter | Title | Forum | Replies | Date |
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Happy and sad for RT-AC86U | Asuswrt-Merlin | 10 |
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