^one of the benefits of not launching your product before it is ready for the public is not being forced to extend the warranty and care refresh policy of every single m3 drone sold in 2021. please let us know cw if you think it is still a grand strategy and if you understand the millions of dollars this will cost the company. i know you can't see it cw but the m3 launch was indeed a "paper release" disguised as a actual launch. i understand most m3 customers won't agree, don't mind getting product that is unfinished because the tech is awesome and they don't mind growing with it because they don't have to seriously use it for their business. and, they have faith in dji to come thru in the end. if i were a dji flyer and i got a beautiful camera almost about as good as the evo2pro camera, i would be elated to say the least and put up with pretty much anything.
excellent drone (but much room to get better) is the m3 and for sure i will get one...in the spring. however, anyone can see this drone is unfinished. when the company has to announce straight away that they have a huge (not small) software update coming in january to fix all the problems and then announce they are resetting the clock on all 2021 drones to 2022....you know that's a sign. and then holiday is cancelled for every employee as they struggle to contain the issues with all hands on deck until this gets fixed? ok, i made up the last part but this HAS to be fixed before chinese new year if there's any hope for m3 and it is already december.
dji had little choice was forced to do this in response to all the complaints and (i don't know this for sure) retailers who have probably had to deal with issues, returns, etc. the online presence is taking a beating, too. it's not too late, even a product that gets off to a bad start can erase the stain and shine in the end which is where i think the m3 will ultimately end up. this is what happens when you launch too soon or without fully testing, autel.