For starters: I am not Dlink or related to Dlink in any way. You implicitly suggest I am.
Anyway, all nice idealistic talk, and as usual it's the same perfect world marketing talk you throw in there that strangely everybody accuses Dlink of doing. You take your business/marketing school lesson seriously.
You don't go to the factory to claim a new pair, but you go to the reseller. Apparently going directly to the manufacturer is a US practice. As is the BS about client satisfaction. It sounds nice, but in practice it's not actually the same. Trust me, I do 'live' business in the US multiple times a year and every time I am stunned by the big (marketing) words and lousy service in the US.
BTW, when the router has a defect, you get a new one. Sounds like a hamburger to me, but McD will not refund your Big M (I prefer the Whopper by the way) if you lay it out on the pavement first and then complain that it tastes bad. And McD does not really care about you. They won't change the recipe. Again: the words sound nice, but there is absolutely no true intention to please the client. It's more avoiding problems and even more, claims.
So how to please a good percentage of the 500.000 (or whatever how many devices they sold) clients who don't know how to operate a decent LAN, when even reading the manual is not an option for them? You don't blame the car salesman or the car manufacturer if the buyer crashes because he just can't drive, do you?
And about the reported issues: Dlink has shown that even though the bare existence of these could not be proven (not even when the specific RMA'd devices itself were tested by Dlink!) they did replace the devices.
IMHO stating that even when the client has an untraceable issue, very probably caused by his own ignorance, the manufacturer should pay the price and do 'something' to address 'an issue'...that's what I would call consumer arrogance.
I guess it's a cultural thing: don't doubt yourself, always blame somebody else.
Noted that you are not from D-Link, and i applaud your assistance. I do, however question why a representative from D-Link is not here. Microsoft's forums have certified reps helping problems, and in a world of social networking, most companies have both Facebook and Twitter presence to monitor an assist in client problems and dissatisfaction.
I think that we are dealing with 2 separate issues here. You anti-US bias is showing and in my case unfairly so, as I am not a US citizen. And secondly, I own the factory in Mexico and we care tremendously about customer service.
I'm not really sure how i laid my Big Mac on the pavement? As a better analogy, it's as if i have been eating Big Mac's for years and they changed the special sauce ( as a non-American, that is the term they use, correct?). I don't like the new taste and i either want it the way it used to be or give me my money back. And guess what, they give you your money back and offer you something else. Not sure how that rings your "Again: the words sound nice, but there is absolutely no true intention to please the client. It's more avoiding problems and even more, claims." statement.
Following the car analogy, isn't it's always the case that when you bring your car in to the shop the rattle isn't there, but you've heard it for weeks? If my car has a serious functionality problem, guess what? I receive a recall notice from the dealer and they fix it. Can D-Link claim the same.
You spout figures of 500,000 clients ( do you actually have the number of people who have bought a D-Link DIR-655? ) becuase on the http://forums.dlink.com/index.php?topic=10668.0 thread
I do, as of now 12.733 people have read this thread. You sound like a logical guy, so what does that tell you? Are all these people happy or are they having a problem that they would like to resolve?
All I am asking for is to have my router fixed. It is beyond the one year warranty period so I cannot RMA it, even though it worked fine until they updated the firmware. I have tried through the
directemail support group where they gave up, and have tried to address this issue with you in a separate thread. As a Level 10, what have i done wrong? That's all I want to know, is
HOW to get my router to stay connected?
And the arrogance behind me blaming it on other people only shows your ignorance, furthered by that culture remark. I blame no one. I say D-Link upgraded a firmware that is causing innumerable problems and people in this forum want a solution.
No blame. As an active participant, you have voluntarily shouldered that responsibility.
Regards