I voted "No" as the problem still exists on my bike. But when the problem was getting severe enough that I had to do something, it was dying everytime I let go of the throttle no matter the RPM. This means while in traffic at speed and someone would cut in front of me, forcing me to let off the throttle quickly and maybe hitting the brakes, I would be left with a dead engine and having to restart while still moving on the highway. Dealer had no clue what to do except tell me I was the only one with this problem. I ended up adjusting the screw so that the bike would idle at 850rpm and this stopped the bike from dying. However, I still have idle problems during "maintainence throttle" when your not requiring the engine to work very hard. Then the ECU seems to have no clue of what to do and just sputters and spits. As soon as I throttle up - the beast is back and raring to go. Dealer thought is was my choice of gas brands... or the fuel filter.... If that was true, I would think it would prove out with the harder I asked the bike to work, not at idle.
Adjusting the idle screw only stopped the bike from idleing below what it should and then, in turn, dying. It is a "quick fix" but doesn't solve the problem.