From the perspective of an amplifier designer, these are the biggest improvements I've been aware of.
OTLs became a lot more reliable- as reliable as any other tube amp. OTLs offer transparency like no other tube amp.
Class D amps have been refined to the point where they are contenders. If you have one that is self-oscillating, they can have a distortion signature that lacks the brightness and harshness of regular class AB solid state amps. This means they can sound smooth like a good tube amp until you run it out of gas. I'd say that's a major break-thru.
But the ability to get rid of that solid state brightness is not limited to class D. Newer semiconductors are around now that didn't exist in the early 1980s or before, making it possible to build a class AB amp that has distortion so low that they don't sound bright. The trick in both the case of the class D and the latter amps I've mentioned here is to have feedback in excess of 35dB. This allows the amp to have consistently low distortion numbers at all frequencies rather that just at low frequencies like amps of the 70s and 80s.
So that's a big deal too.
OTLs became a lot more reliable- as reliable as any other tube amp. OTLs offer transparency like no other tube amp.
Class D amps have been refined to the point where they are contenders. If you have one that is self-oscillating, they can have a distortion signature that lacks the brightness and harshness of regular class AB solid state amps. This means they can sound smooth like a good tube amp until you run it out of gas. I'd say that's a major break-thru.
But the ability to get rid of that solid state brightness is not limited to class D. Newer semiconductors are around now that didn't exist in the early 1980s or before, making it possible to build a class AB amp that has distortion so low that they don't sound bright. The trick in both the case of the class D and the latter amps I've mentioned here is to have feedback in excess of 35dB. This allows the amp to have consistently low distortion numbers at all frequencies rather that just at low frequencies like amps of the 70s and 80s.
So that's a big deal too.

