HDMI is a disaster is what it is

How versioned inputs, versioned cables, where each version doesn't need to support all features of said version, and now as of 1.4 they don't need to tell you what version you're working with, all in an all-too-fragile non-locking connector which the sheer weight of the cable can pull on the jack and damage it, all wrapped in a content protection mechanism that has too many sync issues was supposed to make connection simpler for consumers is beyond imagining! Even as a technophile it gets confusing....

I'm hoping it matures and vanishes. Soon. I'd gladly upgrade to get rid of it

maybe 1.8 can have a simple locking prong and mandatory strain relief!
That will be quite some time, outside Japan and a few Scandanavian countries. Beyond the Big Telecom interference, topography remains a big issue. They keep upping services, but usually in selected high density areas. Japan on the other hand runs OC lines to apartment blocks (one reason Japanese electronics manufacturers seem out of touch at times...they're already living in tomorrow...)
I can certainly hope and dream you're right on that. Quality used to be a key feature back in the day on most things...now everyone expects a $10 plastic replacement in Walmart, and wants it to last 3 months before they change the color. I see the current economy in the world either finally restoring quality (demand for what people buy to last) or finally destroying t (cheap above anything else!)
Agreed...though I think the first trend we'll see is $150 networked 12.1 with 10 HDMI inputs, from brands like "Coby"

After hi-fi becomes low-priced with all the features to the point that it's commodity, we'll see the normal priced stuff start touting solid state capacitors.
The thing that amazes me is for $300 I can buy a PC motherboard with all solid caps (more complex than an AVR board), designed for 50,000 hours use. PC CPUs are generally accepted to never fail. Yet all other electronics still use nasty $0.29 gel caps. Power supplies (often caps) cheap IC materials, and low end caps and windings are 90% of the problems on AVRs, and would cost less than $100 (to $200 depending on model) to make them tank-like. It's that "It's $10 cheaper" mentality that drove quality down...and for some reason few companies tried marketing durability as a selling feature (which is sad....the sales of extended service plans are proof positive that appealing to people's desire for a long-lived purchase sells very, very well.)
I *AM* sort of annoyed at the feature packed billing though. DTS:MA and DD:THD is silly to even put in a receiver since half the HD content REQUIRES it to be decoded in the player anyway. Why not leave that in the domain of players if it'll reside there half the time anyway. It's lossless, it's just a decompressor, it's not like audio quality can suffer. At the high end they're pushing 10, 12 channel surround...how many people have the room for that many speakers, let alone the money for that many *good* speakers?

There's a few silly directions appearing in the AV world to convince people they need the next thing.
There's another plague in the AV world though with all the new gadgets: heat. I think a lot of flaws (voltage issues aside) are heat related. There's no good cooling in AVRs. Stagnant air and passive ventilation just don't work with the PC-like processing going on. But add active fans like Pioneer does and everyone complains it's ruining the sound quality, creating interference, etc. Maybe some heat pipe designs should be worked out...or some system of quietly moving air through the system rather than hoping for passive convection cooling in a big aluminum box. Those days are done. Some of those hot ICs don't even have a heat spreader or sink on them.
Personally I'd take quality over features any day so long as it does what I need. When was the last time you used the exciting Jazz Hall mode?