
| From: Alex Kink via talk <talk@gtalug.org> | I'm sure there are more, but Linksys recently released a spiritual successor to the WRT54GL, the router that gave a boost to the development of the 3rd party router OSes (ddwrt, openwrt, tomato). Ability to install open source OSes is even in the marketing material of this new router. | | https://www.linksys.com/ca/wrt3200acm-ac3200-mu-mimo-gigabit-wi-fi-router/WR... I have earlier successors. They are OK. But Linksys didn't go the whole way making things easy for OpenWRT. Historically Linksys has been hostile to open source. Unfortunately, that's true of most of the SoC vendors too. Annecdote: I was a contributor to FreeS/WAN IPSec software for Linux. Linksys released a VPN router with FreeS/WAN. Without telling us and without credit (pertectly legal). They also released it without source (a violation of the license). I knew that it was my code because the manual described a feature that was only implemented in FreeS/WAN. I bought one of those routers and found that the feature was disabled. But I really wanted to use it. So I requested the source code from them. They ignored my request. Eventually they released the source. But not in a buildable form. By that time the product was dead. The hardware never worked reliably for the users. (I never actually tried it because it wasn't going to be useful to me without improved firmware.)