@michaelgreenaudio-
"performance, prices, and attitude"
Succinct and spot on. Consumers used to look to trade magazines to assist in assessing performance virtues and offering guidance as to what represented value in the marketplace. Somewhere along the line, probably when test measurements were thrown out the window and things like $3000 cables, $5000 "power conditioners", and $50,000 amplifiers became "the norm", trade magazines like Stereophile began to lose credibility.And even with the blatant censorship demonstrated by the magazine's chief editor against a knowledgeable, independent voice of fact and reason surrounding the latest promotional product (MQA), for a good percentage of audiophiles, it's too painful to acknowledge they've been duped by a trade magazine that has been more interested in representing their financial interests than representing the interests of consumers. Everyone is entitled to their own opinions. No one is entitled to their own facts. Stereophile and their paying advertisers haven't figured that out apparently. They seem to think they can make up the facts as they go along, censure dissenting voices, and no one will notice. Good luck with that.