$789 for the A version and $1499 for the B one. Looks like LibreVNA is better positioned at around $600.
Note that the thread is about custom software for the NanoVNA, which includes the V2Plus4 and the LiteVNAs. Because the LibreVNA's direct protocol to control it is not documented, I have no plans to ever support it.
The cost for OWOs 6GHz versions along with there's just not enough improvements for me to consider it. If I wanted a higher end VNA, I would purchase a used professional system (which is what I have).
Since I upgraded my NanoVNA V2plus4 last week to the latest 20220814 firmware I see that the "Save" feature is not working anymore, after power off/on again it goes to default settings. On top of this "Recall" presets crash the unit and it needs a power cycle.
I have no use for any firmware features beyond getting the raw data out of the unit as fast as possible and having control over the hardware. The only reason I would use one standalone is for a demonstration. The display, buttons, SD card interfaces for me have no use.
I have posted many times about the problems I have ran into with firmware and software both. There's a reason I don't upgrade firmware and write my own software.
VNA6000 is using the same firmware... so I guess it is also inheriting these bugs.
The V2Plus4 firmware that was supplied with mine was very stable. The firmware for the V2Plus would hang and require the unit be power cycled. After having them for about a year, I tried several versions of firmware for the V2Plus before finding one that was stable. Newer versions would hang as before. I wouldn't suggest any firmware is good or bad without performing extensive tests on it.
The firmware for the original NanoVNA was so poor and was being updated so often I wrote a regression test to help me sort though the mess. The downside to open source, you have people that maybe shouldn't be coding working on it. The version I run is very old and has no features. I could care less as it's stable and throws up some good enough data.