Lets agree to disagree. While Asus unit you got may have been defective, you could've easily replaced on warranty. Everyone has a bad apple once in a while. Even Apple is not flawless.
My problem with Netgear is not their reliability of hardware but absolutely abyssal software "quality" control/testing.
I sold Netgear
Enterprise Next-Gen firewall/router to a client of mine. One of software releases had interesting side "feature": on each reboot it would replace IPSec VPN shared key to
49 asterisks. This issue took me a very long time to find and troubleshoot. After 3 year subscription ended, I quickly switched them to Sophos UTM and couldn't be happier about it. So much better in every possible way.
This is TRWTF and is completely and totally unacceptable. The firewall interface was not intuitive and then I worked with Netgear support - they are out right giving me wrong information.
I had many other similar encounters with horrible Netgear software on different products.
Also this comes to mind:
http://www.pcworld.com/article/3149554/security/an-unpatched-vulnerability-exposes-netgear-routers-to-hacking.html
Do keep in mind - this is not sole indecent - this crap occurs with netgear products fairly often.
I also don't see currently anyone on Cisco leadership page anyone with history with Cisco and tbh it's not surprising.
https://www.netgear.com/about/management/
Just to be crystal clear - I highly recommend Asus since Imo they are lest offending router out of the box since they are based on solid hardware AND they now took router software much more seriously after few security blunders of their own.
I said it before and I will repeat it again - for my own next system I will separate router and wifi into completely separate boxes and both likely to be from Ubiquiti Networks