What is happening now is that companies are really looking at costs and benefits....
The following is imaginary, because I have no idea of the real numbers or even company names:
Let's say there is Home Theater Magazine with 150,000 paid subscribers, Sound & Vision with 75,000 paid subscribers, and Home Theater & Sound with 25,000 paid subscribers. All these magazines call up Velodyne and offer their advertising deals. Velodyne says "Hey, we gotta watch our spending, but we figure anyone who reads Sound & Vision will already get Home Theater Magazine, so why double advertise? Because anyone who reads Sound & Vision already gets Home Theater" ... so they say let's just choose one. They know their logic isn't 100% true, but they do know they have deminishing returns each place they advertise and that they are on a tight budget.
Then they look on the Internet and they are advertising on Audioholics and some other websites. They look on Audioholics and do a search for "Velodyne" and see all the comments on here just steering people to SVS. They figure, anyone clicking around on this site is looking at the forum responses, so if all these people not only don't recommend the Velodynes but actually steer people away from them, an advertisement on the top isn't going to do anything for them.
For Dayton, they are probably just reaaallllyyy struggling, because while I love Dayton... I think its cool stuff... thats what you buy when you are broke. It's an awesome bang for the buck and the kits are fun to assemble and not irritating or tedious. It kind of teters between DIY and assembled stuff, a bit soft for the hardcore DIYers and a bit too much of a pain for someone who wants to pull it out of the box and jam.
What used to be some extra advertising spending, people are now really looking at and deciding if its worth it.
Gene and Audioholics are in my thoughts, and if I think of anything I'll for sure post it.