
Originally Posted by
xs10shl
Just an observation, and not a criticism - if you made yourself a grid with all of Lutron's product offerings on one axis, and all the possible capabilities on the other axis, you'd find that cost does not always correlate with capability. For example, a $30 Maestro switch can recall the last set intensity, but a $400 QS switch cannot be programmed to do so. This is not to say that the Maestro switch must therefore be better, because the QS switch can be made to do a wide variety of cool things the Maestro cannot. However, it is curious that product managers determined that such a feature was necessary in its basic models, but unimportant in its expensive models.