Call me old-fashioned, but a refrigerator should never have to reboot. ;-) A microcontroller running drop-dead-simple firmware is OK, but if it ever has to reboot for any reason save power outages, they've failed.
I'll certainly agree on Samsung's software (at least the sort of things users directly interact with) being a vortex of suck, though. Back when I used a Galaxy S Relay "4G" (the "4G" in quotes because they were calling DC-HSPA+ "4G"), I found the phone to be much better after I installed CyanogenMod.
Too bad CyanogenMod imploded, and worse, there's no LineageOS for that old handset, which was one of the last good slider phones.
To be fair to Samsung, I have no complaints about their SSD firmware, but I'll stay away from their cell phones.
The value proposition of IoT is so bad. Maybe I'm old fashioned too, but I prefer things that work and can be repaired by third parties when they don't.
I requested the source code on that refrigerator just to see how terrible it was. It's garbage clearly but I was pleasantly surprised they didn't hard code any passwords like Cisco's standard operating procedure. I still would never put it on wifi though.
Call me old-fashioned, but a refrigerator should never have to reboot. ;-) A microcontroller running drop-dead-simple firmware is OK, but if it ever has to reboot for any reason save power outages, they've failed.
I'll certainly agree on Samsung's software (at least the sort of things users directly interact with) being a vortex of suck, though. Back when I used a Galaxy S Relay "4G" (the "4G" in quotes because they were calling DC-HSPA+ "4G"), I found the phone to be much better after I installed CyanogenMod.
Too bad CyanogenMod imploded, and worse, there's no LineageOS for that old handset, which was one of the last good slider phones.
To be fair to Samsung, I have no complaints about their SSD firmware, but I'll stay away from their cell phones.