I'll throw in another GE Nautilus to the pile of craps. Bought probably around '05-'06, my dad got a settlement check from a saga of disability/workman's comp fraud, and with part of that money he bought us a portable dishwasher, as our sink was the porcelain coated cast-iron variety that couldn't be cut or drilled into. I begged him to let me help choose it, but of course, I was a "kid" and knew nothing about what I was saying, and he brought home what would be a gigantic headache for myself and a point of argument between my parents and I.
First problem was its tendency to never fill to the point that it needed without choking on air, and our old clogged faucet didn't help it. The first few weeks of having it was torture, because I could hear the pump struggling and knew that water was barely moving around inside the tub, but try as I might to explain to my dad why it wasn't working properly, he told me to "just leave it alone and it was doing its job fine" despite the crud that would be left on dishes in the top rack. So, I had to devise a system, since I was the main one to do the dishes and laundry anyway, and this system was to pull the hand sprayer over at the beginning of each fill and put 45 seconds worth of water in manually. He finally realized something wasn't right when I showed him the difference between the water levels and how the machine performed, but it took three months of me doing that for him to get it. We replaced the sink faucet entirely, which restored water pressure and enabled the machine to fill properly, BUT it still didn't solve half the problems that dishwasher had. Not to mention it was loud, and was a pain to roll back and forth.
I still to this day get annoyed even thinking about it, because at the time I had picked out a perfect portable Whirlpool PowerClean, which was slightly less expensive than the GE but would have been a leaps and bounds better performer, and quieter. Still, beg as I may, he would never let us try and return the GE, and to this day my mom now has it since he passed away, although it is built in at the house she's in now.