Your comparing a shovel to a complicated peice of electronic equipment? lol.
Second, that actually happens. You can purchase yard equipment and abuse it, and the hardware store may refuse to return it.
I hope you are half heartedly posting that and not trying to make me look like an idiot. I also hope you don’t think for a minute that I would buy the router, abuse it, and then demand help with it when it breaks?!?! I agree that a lot of places don’t take returns but that’s why you buy from a company that will stand behind their product no matter what. Take craftsman for instance. I buy a wrench from them for my weekend project and instead of just using my hands like I am clearly supposed to do, I use a 3 foot piece of pipe for that ‘extra’ leverage. Well wouldn’t you know it, it broke the box end right off. I can in fact bring it back and get a brand new one.
I was comparing the processes NOT the products.
It starts with unpacking and using:
You unpack the shovel to dig a hole and it breaks before you even really get started because there was something wrong with it to begin with. You unpack the router and it is already broken too.
Then the process for support:
I brought the shovel back knowing they probably wouldn’t take it back because I used it a little, but I was looking for options because you could clearly see the shovel head just fell right off. And according to the man on the picture when I bought it, I too would be able to dig a hole. Instead of admitting they had a known flaw (or at least a thought an issue existed), they sold it to me anyway, blamed it on me, and then offered a solution. The company was actually going to research and develop a new shovel head for it. But that process was going to take a year. Also, to top it off they told me that I can’t use it to its full potential even with the fix; so I either sit on my hands accomplishing nothing with my own work while that happens or I suck it up and buy another one. I like most people at that point would just buy another one and eat the loss. But I know a shovel doesn't cost 200 dollars; A little different when you are replacing a complicated piece of equipment.
I’ve stated I agree that it is complicated equipment but the most basic of functions that it should be able to do IS route (like a shovel should be able to move dirt). I in no way abuse my router....I would like to and I’ve thought about it twice while writing this post, but I haven’t yet. I have a gigabit network, a total of 10 PCs, and an Xbox. 4 PCs are wired and the rest are wireless and never all on at the same time. I use a gigabit switch (D-Link) to take the load of the streaming movies from the servers to the PC's. My highest throughput in a day through the router is when I am connected to work and that is about 3.5 gigs down and 500 megs up in a 24 hour period of time. Other than that I am looking at about a gig down and 400 megs up. I would agree that maybe I was pushing it but most ISPs provide 7-15 standard and I have had many routers through the years (Even the DIR-655 2 years ago) with this set up and none of them had the results I have today.
I am trying to stay positive but with this router my network is useless. I am trying to help but time is money. I’ve told you in the past that I spent a LOT of hours troubleshooting this router. Every time I upgrade, re-flash, or reset I am out for the next 2 hours while I recreate all of my stuff. Then on top of that is the time spent turning things off and back on to try to figure out a good setting that will allow the game servers to give out at least 30 frames without a hiccup while trying to keep the router connected for more than a day. And even when I posted that I was done, I didn’t give up.
I’ve said it before and I’m saying it again.
“I love the hardware and I love the things the developers are trying to do. Most of the other brands do not have everything this one does. The only thing lacking is a stable firmware”
My apologies if this post is too long I just felt the need to clear the air. I don’t want less support because of a failure to communicate on a professional level.