So? He let them use it in the game in exchange for $20k. That’s all they want or need. And before you start with this tiresome license transfer crap, please take a second to read this whole thread to see why that’s not relevant.
brazil, india, angola, china... they are all pushing a central bank owned database for even informal transactions... all the way down to buying candy at a red ligth.
no fees and instant payments are the carot (and then they add daily limits when criminals start to kidnap people to transfer money). But the end game is a stasis wetdream of state control over citzen relations.
Not a single wifi consumer vendor have any say on those features. it is one hundred percent done on the closed OS in the radio chip.
your expensive ubiquiti/oanda/cisco have the same mimo/beanforming performance as any opensource/clone using the same wifi radio chipset.
the consumer facing OS just flip a bit somewhere in the configuration flash. granted, knowledge of the right bit to flip mighty be missing on the opensource still, but there's no magic happening in ubiquity owned code.
uniquity is extra shaddy as they buy off the shelf components but demand custom labeling to look like it's their custom silicon. it's not. uniquity is the matress store of wifi.
> uniquity is extra shaddy as they buy off the shelf components but demand custom labeling to look like it's their custom silicon. it's not. uniquity is the matress store of wifi.
They're not - I have no idea about the hardware itself, but what makes Ubiquiti so popular is the software integration layer. Their stuff Just Works even for incredibly complex and large installations while still being easy to configure.
he smartly follows the line you quoted out of context with "and even that they didn't deliver" or something.
so, no contract, an email agreement which was never fullfilled.
man, be happy this guys is a spineless hippie or you would be working overtime and still paying a deal.