While searching the site for information about Audio Advisor I stumbled onto the article.
I was quite surprised to find that kind of content.
Subjective judgement articles are fine, but there are things in the article in regards to the way a computer saves and outputs a digital music file that is simply not factual.
If any individual thinks one software player sounds better than another, that is fine, I see no purpose in debating the point.
Where the problem comes in is when that person starts making stuff up as to why/how they think their favorite achieves the better sound.
Once an author makes up something in a subject area they obviously know nothing about the smell test fails.
While the article in current form did not provide me with any useful information, I would enjoy reading an article evaluating different software music players with the focus being on detailing any additional features that may be in the "paid" products verses those in iTunes, Media Player, Foobar, VLC.....
My wife describes me as a reluctant iTunes user and I would agree with that assesment.
iTunes library management is the best I have been able to find, of course the major flaw with iTunes is, it only works with Apple devices.
If iTunes would allow writing to a flash drive (along with the same flexibility of file conversion as writing to an Apple device) I would consider it a home run.
Since this article was posted in its current form, Audioholics could still turn it into something useful by doing a feature set evaluation and if the resources are available launching a blind listening test comparing the author's favorite to Media Player, iTunes, and foobar.
Rip tracks as (MP3 & AAC 128k, 196k, 256k, 320k), FLAC, ALAC, and include original source material.
Hardware remains constant throughout.