you'll surely see many who will tell you a $20K amplifier sounds like crap.Or that it sounds no different than a $2K amp, or, or that amp A sounds different than amp B, or that $20K amp C sounds like crap when used w pre-amp D or, dare I say it, power cord E! Of course, another way in which high end audio differs is that the amp by itself cannot make any sound; in some ways it would be like trying to evaluate a car solely on the basis of how many horsepower the engine can make, without considering the suspension, chassis, tires, gearing, etc. I also think that people become so passionate just because there ultimately are no objective criteria (sorry, Raul, not in my world!) and so arguments/discussions/disagreements have no verifiable "correct" resolution.
Back to the Anna- I could not agree more w Actusreus (you know, that's even harder to spell than Swap...Smwap...Swapmwalker...); it's totally incomprehensible that a well-established industry leader (to say nothing of a garage shop) would send a flagship product to the English-speaking world's most widely read reviewer in their specialty w/o making 100% certain that the sample was PERFECT!!!!! It's not like Consumer Reports where they buy one off the shelf. It's not like there is an assembly line churning out an Anna every minute, 24/7. Ortofon knew it was a review sample and who was doing the review. At that price, the customer has the right to know/demand every single cart is individually tested and sold w a spec sheet to verify it meets the design intent and meets or exceeds the published specifications. If that were my company, the head of QC, head of marketing, and the QC inspector of those units would all be looking for new jobs.