I guess I'm not sure where your coming from here, I have yet to not be able to utilize discrete programming on my 9600... there might be times that are more laborious for implementation but I can't say I can't get to work perfectly...
I'm sorry you have so much trouble with Philips remotes, I'm not a huge fan of Philips products whatsoever, but they truly hit a homerun with their remotes, putting themselves in the class of AMX and other custom installer products for 1/10th the price... IMO
Don't get me wrong, but AMX/Crestron are well beyond what Pronto or most other remotes are on the best of days.
While Philips got lucky with the Pronto, that's about the best I can say for them. As a company they seem clueless, which means if you actually have issues you are likely on your own. Companies which are more dedicated to remotes and have other well established quality products are more likely to offer excellent support for those products for consumers. As well, you generally will see first rate products from any number of other manufacturers which easily match the Pronto remotes these days. So, given two equal products, go with the one that costs less and gives better service would be my recommendation.
Personally I've programmed Harmony, URC, Philips, Marantz (been a while), AMX, and Crestron.
I didn't have any issues with the Harmony remote at all and I was fairly happy with the online programming setup. I did not play with the timing of things, but did go in and rename some buttons and move some things around which only ended up taking a few minutes. Very nice!
The URC I think I need the full programming suite, but what I have was only marginal for programming. I couldn't seem to find a way to have the full IR suite for a product available for me to put on buttons as I wished. Kind of annoying, but workable.
The Philips, with any graphics, was a lot of work, and touchscreens, while they can be intuitive, also require you to look at them during use instead of looking at the display.
Both AMX and Crestron offer hard button remote controls as well as touchpanels - but they definitely are expensive. The plus side is that on more complex rooms they are truly flawless systems and you have options to deal with products which don't have discrete codes for certain functions as well as serial control and potentially two-way control.
The main Crestron hard button remote is licensed from URC and is their MX-850 remote. I imagine we may see this change to a newer URC model this year, but I'm not positive on that.
I think it's super important that people put functionality FIRST over the look of the remote. A touchscreen remote LOOKS sexy - but it's a pain in the rump to have to look down to use a remote every time you want to do anything. Especially basic functions like changing channels or volume adjustments. Just something to keep in mind. A hard button remote isn't as sexy, but when you look at it and start memorizing the button layout, you can operate it without even turning the backlight on. Plus, you can put identical remotes in all the rooms of your home and once your family knows how to use the remote, they can oeprate any room in the house.