Originally posted by Alexandru Mihaita:
one word - [b]anytime 
[/b]
It's not up to me to organize a test for you. That ball is in your court.
I would assume that as a software engineer yourself, you would test your programming before you ship it - correct? It's called a reality check, to test the validity of your ideas.
In the same vein, If you want to make claims about some alleged difference in audio equipment, I would assume that the engineer in you would want to do a reality check to verify that what you are hearing is reality or an illusion - correct?
Audio is no different from any other science - and yes, in many fundamental ways it is a science. If assumptions are made, they should be verified so that we're not talking garbage, but verified facts. Electrons behave exactly the same way, whether they are flowing through the space shuttle, a computer, or an audio amplifier. The action of these electrons has been very well known for over 100 years.
People sometimes have the mistaken idea that somehow electricity behaves differently in audio circuits than in all other circuits. That's so far from the truth to be laughable, and unbelievable.