I've used tones of equipment from different vendor over decades, for the Wifi counterparts, there is no such thing as perfect/flawless product. You choose the product with the weakness/problems you can accept or live with. Got a few Asus product in the early days, vowed never use them again, but came back for a bit and piecer here and there, I can tell you Asus has really good R&D team in terms of hardware design, and they sometimes do find good niche to their products. Their problem is not really the design or built quality, but their software implementation. Whether it motherboards, graphics card, mobile phone -- even routers. I choose the selected Asus router because it has (what it seems) a good featured stock firmware, modified enhanced stock firmware (hat of to RMerlin), DD-WRT and Tomato. So if I dislike something, which is easy for any wireless product, I have the choice of choosing. While I think Netgear is a good product on its own, I'm sure it has it fair share of issues, but like many I no longer consider DD-WRT is a good alternative, and face it OpenWRT is not the greatest either if it can't fully support the hardware due to the FLOSS nature. So I find the RMerlin supported router has a good striking balance if I shall decide to jump the firmware between devices. That just my two cents.
If I really want overkill routing for home with the minimum hassle, I would opt for an x86/64 NUC (preferably under 10W) with BSD/Linux based routing... Provide you want to go down that complex setup root.
As for Ubiquiti... Not really in the same product segment as Asus routers...
If I really want overkill routing for home with the minimum hassle, I would opt for an x86/64 NUC (preferably under 10W) with BSD/Linux based routing... Provide you want to go down that complex setup root.
As for Ubiquiti... Not really in the same product segment as Asus routers...