Whether or not a patent was granted, the application describes in clear terms (without the specific firmware coding involved) how MQA works.
		
		
	 
It absolutely does not. You clearly do not grasp the concept of a patent application. 
A patent application does typically not cover the entirety of a product in the market. It usually refers just to one certain feature or functionality of the whole. Also, a patent application is not equal to product specifications. There is no mandate to use any of it in a product. 
What MikeCh says is also correct, an application does not equal to a granted patent. Even less does a patent equal to a product. This has has all been laid out for you, but it does not seem to sink in. 
Let me describe this through a medical analogy (your field of expertise), so it‘s maybe easier for you to recapitulate: You say you have read the words in a patent application, and now understand how MQA works. That is a bit similar to applying a bandaid on someone, and claiming to therefore understand how brain surgery works. 
There is this concept called logical reasoning, let me show how it works: 
- you keep on insisting on things which are incorrect 
- you do that, because you don’t know better (fair enough) 
- you don’t know better, because it’s not your field of expertise  
- perhaps you should not insist 
Just a suggestion. 
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk