Wow, there's a lot wrong with that article.
It implies there are actually preamps in this world that clip a 1 Vrms. I don't even know how you could design such a thing without doing it deliberately, which nobody would, nor has for the past 30 years at least. Clipping at 1Vrms would be clipping at 2.83v peak to peak, which would imply a preamp output stage supply running at somewhere around 6V, or bipolar 3V, or some kind of output pad. Nope, don't think so. Clipping at 1 volt is just a really exaggerated example, never happens in real life.
Next we have the noise issue. Again, in real life, since we do have more than 1Vrms at the pre, and only need a little less than that to drive the power amp, where's the noise problem? From there we go to this sentence, "Besides noise configuration, an increase in amplifier gain will decrease in the bandwidth (BW) of the circuit, meaning some valuable data may get eliminated from the input signal (the amplifier works as a filter)." Increasing the gain of an amplifier will decrease bandwidth, but the input gain controls of, say a QSC amp (or any other) do not actually change the internal gain of the amp! Rather, the control acts as an input attenuator, permitting overall system gain adjustment without changing bandwidth of the amp. Sorry, there'll be no amplifier bandwidth changing with the gain control.
Then, "Additionally, having a high gain amplifier may introduce DC offset at the output. In an amplifier with high input impedance, increasing the gain will introduce a DC offset which affects the operating point of the circuit (changes the balance of the amplifier)." Yes, this might be true if we were dealing with the very most raw and basic amplifier building blocks, but that's not what a power amp is. Again, internal gain is fixed, only input attenuation changes. DC offsets are a really bad thing, and in any modern and well designed amp, any DC offset has been eliminated by some means, like a coupling capacitor in the right place, active DC servo, etc. There's simply nothing available to the user that could possibly alter the DC offset or operating point or balance of the amplifier's circuit.
Moving to the discussion of load impedance, "There is naturally a big difference between rating voltage output on an open circuit, i.e. no load, versus 600 ohms, which is likely to be a considerably tougher task than most amplifiers you’re likely to meet, which have input impedances on the order of tens of thousands of ohms. Rating open circuit doesn’t take into account potential current limits which could bring on preamp clipping much sooner than you might expect once you introduce real world conditions including the cable impedance."
I have no idea why a 600 ohm load would even be mentioned, as it never occurs in the real world as a preamp load. Never. Never has either. The paragraph is correct in that amplifiers have input impedances of 10K or higher, which is, essentially, an open circuit to the preamp. So what "potential current limits" are we then talking about? What's the load that brings the onset of clipping down? And What on This Earth are we talking about "cable impedance" for? Unless the cable between the preamp and power amp is several miles long, the characteristic cable impedance is a complete non-factor. And if we did have a 10 mile long preamp cable, the cable impedance would be the least of your worries, because now we'd have to equalize the cable, and the preamp isn't up to that task without external help. None are. But it's really silly to cite such a thing as a problem that could potentially increase the possibility of clipping! Just so we are clear, there is nothing about a power amp input impedance, or cable impedance that can overload a preamp output such that the clipping point is reduced!
In the concluding paragraph, we have this gem, referring to voltage gain, "However, this little detail can be the difference between a truckload of distortion or noise and nice clean sound." Talk about voltage gain! A "truckload"? Really??? This article has amplified a tiny issue by 20dB at least into something huge, major, and catastrophic. It is none of that. Nearly every preamp output will drive nearly every power amp to full output.
I didn't mention the speaker load paragraph, it's sort of out of context of a voltage gain discussion.
I appreciate the attempt, but lets try to provide accurate and relevant information to the unsuspecting hobbyist instead of alarmist and inaccurate reporting.