First you want the thread moved. Then you want it locked. Then you want to choose who gets to speak and who doesn't. This isn't your precinct to cop. I'm not going to listen to you any more.
This is a product that solves a problem that doesn't exist. That is one of the big problems in audiophile circles. They don't 1) observe and look for problems, 2) try to figure out what is causing the problem, 3) apply science to try to solve the problem, then 4) observe again to see if the problem has gone away. Instead, they decide on a problem with no observation then apply a shooting fish in a barrel solution and announce success without any kind of observational proof that they've made any kind of an improvement.
It can be argued that anything that "does no harm" is fair, but if you are saying a problem exists and your product solves it, you should be able to come up with some sort of audible proof of that. But in this case, it did open people up to harm, and now we're told that's fixed so we should try it again. Fixing an egregious error isn't making it a worthwhile product. It's still smoke and mirrors.
I can run my computer processing a complex photoshop filter on a very large file and my iTunes library still plays perfectly. Maybe other people have 15 year old computers that chug through stuff like that and the sound skips. If you hear that happening, just shut down whatever app is causing the problem. Solved!