It started with a bold claim from Carver stating his amplifier was indistinguishable from a tube unit.
His first claim was he could make it indistinguishable. Not that it started there. After that he produced amps such as the M500t. He may have produced others on this same idea, and it's arguable how well he succeeded.
His amp may ONLY have been an accurate reproduction of the CJ amp with 1 particular speaker. In any event, I don't claim his success, but I do claim his revolutionary way to evaluate equipment has not carried us forward, and that's disappointing.
one of which was increasing its current capacity significantly
Not my understanding. Among other things, Carver increased output impedance, going the opposite way.
don't agree that most of our measurements are stuck in 1970 technology. The test equipment we have today is like comparing a Lotus to a Model T
Which has not actually revolutionized our understanding. We, the buying public, read reviews and measurements taken with test gear which can add more zeroes to the distortion measurements and more dB to the S/N measurements compared to that in the 1970s but we are not presented with revolutionary ways of understanding the performance of electronics and their audibility.
Likewise, I don't agree that no one has made improvements in measurements. Folks have, I just don't see them dumping their IP into public domain for their competitors to use.
It's quite plausible this is true, and that leaves us, again the buyers, in exactly the same place as if it didn't exist. We as consumers are stuck with 1970s definitions of electronics measurements, despite vastly superior measurement possibilities, disk storage space, CPU power to now investigate the dynamic performance of gear in entirely new ways.
Best,
E