What I find most interesting is that DJI is up to what, the 5th variant of the Phantom and DJI was well known as the flyaway king for a very long time. In fact Phantoms and Inspires were still falling out of the sky last month because of a battery sensor software bug.
3DR probably should have put the Solo through an open source type testing first, but compared to YEARS of Phantom defects, unexplained flyaways, cracking arms, motors physically falling off and a myriad of other problems, 3DR fixed things quite well IMO and in a timely manner.
All these flying robots are going to have problems, but to say the Solo had more than DJI is just laughable.
I have had two Solo's. Neither gave me problems, but ultimately I returned them (December) because of the FAA registration and yet to be determined official regulations which I believe will be draconian. In fact, those complaining about Solo's lack of range will be unpleasantly surprised when they discover geofencing will be enforced which includes limiting distance from home. Oh yes, it's coming, count on it. The government wants a way to ground every drone with a flick of a switch. DJI already has the ability. It's only a matter of time before we hobbyists are confined to getting not only permission but also provide a flight plan. It may not happen to small drones, but I'll bet it's in the works.
FWIW, I still have 4 other MR's, all AC FC but have no plans to register at this time. The outcome of John Taylor's lawsuit may determine whether I get back out of the hobby again for the second time in 37 years, but there's always micro-drones