Hahaha, I had no idea this thread existed. Very amusing to read it in hindsight.
So in the time that has passed, most definitely a few interesting things happened. I suppose the most relevant is that I gave up reviewing passive speakers. Why?
Because, the room and ears and personal taste and a whole bunch of subjective preference as well as aesthetics and exposure to marketing materials and what's available at a really good deal with free shipping ont he day the buyer feels that impulse to spend... that's what really goes into a speaker buying decision.
And that's before getting to the travesty of people thinking that speaker cables and power cords are added to the system.
In other words, all the measurements in the world are not enough to convince most speaker shoppers of anything. And that's before we get into the VERY thorny issue of whether measurements taken by reviewers are accurate enough. Because when you add up the variables (unit to unit variation, the lack of an anechoic chamber, the likely "less than perfect" accuracy of the mic used to measure) who know how much error creeps in.
According to Harman, even a company with an anechoic chamber is going to have meausrements that deviate from the true response by up to 3 dB if they only do a handful of measurements, instead of hundreds of measurements executed with robotic precision. That makes things tough for the home reviewers to claim theirs are accurate measurements. You don't see reviewers posting a margin of error for their own measurements (and without a proper reference, there's no way for them to really know what it is)... yet surely one exists.
Anyhow, having separated myself from that world, I now laugh because I very well know the PR folks who supply the gear to reviewers, the engineering folks who design the gear, and of course the reviewers who make their living focusing on speakers. Good on them all, I'm happy to just read the reviews these days.
As for Gene and AOAB, he rejoined the group and we get along fine.