How far have ss amps really come in the last twenty years?


I have owned and enjoyed my Jeff Rowland model 8 ( recently modded and upgraded by Jeff to the last version) for many years. I recently had the opportunity of comparing it ( after mods) to a few of the current ss models from Gamut, D'Agostino, YBA, Parasound, Sim audio, CH precision, Constellation,PS audio,Pass Labs  and Musical Fidelity. The results were very interesting, because to my ears and in the systems that we did the comparison, the Rowland held its own against all but the most expensive D'Ag and CH amps. Even those were only very slightly outclassing the Rowland in the areas of top end resolution...and a tad in the bottom end resolution. Now the thing is that the last revision to the Rowland 8 was designed by Jeff over ten years ago! 
So, my question for those more technically inclined than myself is...how far has the design of ss amps come in the last ten...or even twenty years? 
128x128daveyf
There's another aspect that comes into play which I think is perhaps the biggest advance - price for performance on an inflation-adjusted basis you get way more today.
Are saying most all expensive amps made in the last 20 years sound similar?

Very hard to believe!

Do they all have the same flavor?

Or do you have no preference of one over another?

If so, there is no best or better or worse.
On paper the best possible circuits have already been designed, now it's just a matter of implementation and personal preference.
How far have ss amps really come in the last twenty years?

Quite a bit, just to pick one area, global feedback was used too much to get distortion down 20 or more years ago, these days the good ones do it without too much feedback, and with the use sometimes of just local feedback, but that takes a bit more matching ect to do right but the rewards are exponential.

Cheers George 
SS amplification reached sonic equivalence decades ago! If you think that amplifier A sounds better than amplifier B, remember it is only in your mind - not in Reality! Expectation bias is the ruling factor here when trying to ascertain amplifier "quality"!