I love this forum. On one hand people are trying to be scientific and objective on the the other hand certain things get disregarded. For example, latest review of TSC in wall speaker. Purely subjective in terms of sound and useless. None of the gurus here mind it. But then someone mentions break in, oh no, boo hoo, lets kick him in the n..ts. If you guys want to be objective, you need to do it everywhere and probably do you own measurements to back up the opinions, other wise, well it's just pulp.
When judging two speakers, which very probably measure considerably differently, it is a matter of preference which one likes. But it is another thing to make some claim to objective fact about something that no one has ever demonstrated, such as the idea that breaking in speakers (beyond a few seconds) audibly affects the sound (or whatever other voodoo nonsense one wishes to entertain).
There are times when preferences are appropriate, and times when expressing a preference doesn't make sense (i.e., in cases where no audible difference occurs).
Someone may like the added distortion of analog, as this person does:
http://www.audiokarma.org/forums/showpost.php?p=2326606&postcount=9
It is fine that they prefer cassette copies of CDs over the CDs. But it would be wrong to say that that was more like the original, or that it was higher fidelity. The simple fact is, when one makes an analog copy of something, there will be added distortion of various types, and a degradation of the frequency response, corresponding to whatever imperfections there are in the recorder and the medium (i.e., "blank tape" or whatever it is recorded onto).
And, of course, it is well-established that a cassette copy of something will add wow & flutter, distortion, and frequency response deviations, often at a level that is easily audible.
To put this another way, some things are well-established as being audibly different, and some other things are such that no human being has ever been able to show that they have actually heard a difference. When we are dealing with things in which it is common for there to be audible differences (e.g., speakers), it is fine for someone to prefer one thing over the other, regardless of which one is more like a natural sound. In the cases of people claiming to hear things that no human being has ever demonstrated the ability to hear (e.g., speaker break-in beyond the first few seconds), reasonable people are naturally skeptical, just as they would be to someone claiming that they can leap over tall buildings in a single bound, or able to hear a gnat flapping its wings a mile away, without the aid of any devices.