Aside from the weird locking problem (which is hopefully software and will get resolved soon) I'm very happy with my A+. I'm also very impressed with their involvement with the community and responsiveness to issues.
Please do not take this post as a criticism, since I am happy with the product and SF as a company, I'm just curious about this situation and like to "be in the know" as they say.
That said, I've noticed (after it being pointed out to me) that the underlying base of the A+ firmware is surprisingly out of date.
Linux Kernel 2.6.36 was released in October of 2010, and is not even the newest 2.6 version. I'm fairly surprised than any 802.11AC SOC would provide a BSP that would include such an old kernel.
OpenWRT Kamikaze was released between 2007 and 2010.
Both of these predate the 802.11AC technologies used in the A+ (Ratified at the end of 2013)
Out of curiosity, what is the reasoning behind shipping with such old code, and is there a roadmap to move to something more modern (the TCP and wifi stack improvements in the 3 series kernels seem to be worth it, but I am most certainly not an expert).
Thanks!