The problem people are having isn't the specs or performance of the ideal OPO, it's the poor QC that makes an issue-free unit way less common than it should be, especially for a phone you can't return just by heading over to Best Buy/the carrier shop.
If *yours* is issue-free, then of course you're happy. But don't pretend you can't see why people would be unhappy to live with imperfections that don't bedevil competitors like the N5.
Uh, isn't there anyone left on the spreadsheet?
I'm not denying there aren't issues. I don't think you can argue its a QC issue either. Plenty of phones have issues too (GNex, N4, N5, etc.). I'm saying in light of the issues we've seen so far, the OPO is actually a pretty good phone.
I've reported tons of issues on JIRA and IIRC I was one of the first to even bring up the touchscreen issues back on July 4th. I'm pretty picky with my devices, but seeing as the CM team has jumped on this issue pretty quickly and issued a few quick fixes and is still committed to fixing this issue, I can say that at least I'm assured that the issue is being looked at.
Compare this to say the ARP issue on the Nexus 4 where push notifications stop coming through when the screen is off...
Google never fixed the issue and instead just closed the ticket.
Also, do you even have an OPO or are you just commenting on the device based on others' feedback?
Edit: I'd like to add that for now I'm giving the CM team some credit for having issued 2 fixes for the touchscreen issue, but I don't see it as fixed yet. Hopefully if they can address the issue within the next month I'll be a lot happier, but if not, yeah, then its a defect I hold against the OPO.