I'm not sure how you got in impression I would waste my time in court, no I don't quite care enough in this case. Even extraordinary circumstances couldn't get me to seek justice in this system. I simply disagree with what you thing "capable" means in this situation, nothing more. yes yes I know "the hardware" I dont care...currently its as capable at doing MU-MIMO is as an air conditioner is at cooling a room without refrigerant.
I was not directing the court comment to yourself, there were others in the reply. I am not disagreeing with you on a personal level of what 'capable' means. You and a few others are simply disagreeing with my understanding of what the legal side of the situation is. Sure, it can be open to interpretation by a judge. But as you say and I agree with, seeking 'justice' is just a waste of time for this matter.
Again, I'll repeat. Everyone with an RT-AC87U bought a router with hardware capable of MU-MIMO (as promised). They did not buy a router that was shipped with MU-MIMO as a feature (out of the box). And if it was not fit for purpose, they could have returned it at that time.
While I sympathize with many that that specific feature is not available yet for this model, that is not what was paid for (even if there were clients to use it with today). Nor what Asus owes anyone (legally). You bought a product as-is and decided to keep it for better or worse. The 'bad' decision (for some) is now easily visible in hindsight. But that was your decision to make, independently. Asus did not force you to buy or keep the router in any way except for the misunderstanding of many that took a fact and turned it into a wish.
Yes i agree, mu-mimo capability means both hardware and software is fuctional, not just hardware, that is just plain stupid.
This is like buying a router that is CAPABLE of WIFI, but then finding out that WIFI doesn't work because the software/firmware that operates it doesn't work. that won't fly in the court of law.
Mark my word, if 6 months passes by and they don't enable mu-mimo nor fix the 5ghz band, i'll get my money back one way or another.
If you bought a Best Buy product, yes, you will get your money back (or a replacement router for free).
But if you're arguing that you've had issues with this product from day one, and you decided to keep it? Not really anyone's issue except your own. As others state here, there units are working great for them.
@L&LD
In my opinion there are two possible explanations:
1) You are somehow connected to Asus
2) You are the perfect customer every company ever dreamed of
I´ll never want to inquire a lawyer instead of just reading the product specs before buying something.
For all others
I bought this router (on amazon) because of the following reasons:
- future-proof features like mu-mimo
- dozens of award winning reviews
- upmarket price and the name asus in promise to get a high quality product
At the moment i´m feeling quite disappointed, as some promised features are missing over a period of time where it is absolutely questionable if they ever get realized.
Furthermore there are plenty of bugs which even drives the average consumer crazy (disable WPS, disable LED button, iPhone problems, android battery drain, DLNA disappearing and so on...) so we don´t talk here on a highly technical level
Asus has a very good reputation and the excellent reviews on their side. But they should be aware of the actual reviews (eg on amazon) that are turning into negative as promises aren´t fulfilled. And nearly every previous review mentioned that some major points are still on the to do list without affecting the test in a negative way because expecting it to get fixed soon. Time to deliver or make a official statement on what's going on.
I am hardly the perfect customer and certainly do not work for Asus or any other large corporation.
But I've also become more realistic of what I should expect and demand from the consumer products I buy for myself or my customers.
I see by your reasons to buy that we are at the opposite end of the way we purchase products.
I do not care if I am test driving a Lamborghini, I will still be critical as #*&&. Does not matter what I may have read or think I know about a product beforehand.
Reviews that I actively seek are the negative ones. And even then, I judge the writer on the subject, apparent experience and steps taken to resolve the issue. Most of these 'reviews' mean nothing. Most of them.
Direct experience is what matters and it does not get more direct than what I experience myself.
I joined almost two years ago and at that time had many questions about the current routers available for consumers. I quickly found that Asus, with all it's imperfections and still corporate 'ad speak', was still the best of the choices available in my area. After using and testing on my own RT-N66U for a few months and experimenting with RMerlin's firmware (and later, others), I could safely recommend them to some of my customers too.
But in each case, I don't promise them the moon (and sound like an Asus commercial). Instead, I ask them to let me try it in their environments and see if it offers a better experience than what they had.
That is my method of knowing I made the right decision for each customer (they tell me themselves). And they do this by using all the capabilities they used before and any new capabilities the new hardware offers and make decisions appropriately.
I just don't understand why everyone else doesn't do this too.
To all,
The comparisons and examples of what Asus has 'done' is what I do not agree with (entirely).
To me, this is like seeing (and testing) a product right in front of you and instead of taking an objective look at what it is and making the appropriate decision for now, daydreaming is allowed to cloud the reality by what might be in the future.
I do not have the luxury of having my customers pay me today for any possible future work I may perform for them. And I do not
expect improvements over what I see at the time of testing either. I hope for them, but see them as a bonus it they materialize, rather than waste time or effort demanding them (anymore).