@emergingsoul wrote:
if they stopped introducing newer models, would they still continue to produce existing speaker models or would all the speaker companies go out of business?
What does "new" mean anyway in this context? I mean, basically it’s what most manufacturers in the domestic arena do already - i.e.: using what’s been around for decades - while calling it "new models." It’s the emperors new clothes all over again. The trick in the midst of this regurgitation is mostly about business accommodation, market competition and to keep people buying your stuff.
They must continue to advance what they do otherwise they have no future, sort of like the need for technology advancements.
All the "LEGO pieces" are at hand as is; it’s about how we combine them (and indeed, start finding the pieces as well as assemblies we’ve all but forgotten about) and use a wider palette than what’s dictated by the conservative and obstinate use of passive and evermore ridiculously expensive speakers predominantly. Not to mention people’s need for ever smaller speakers and how, very obviously, manufacturers cater to that and all the while throw physics by the wayside.
It’s not to say there couldn’t be innovations ahead we’d miss out on, but the more pressing question is whether audiophilia with its inertia of dogma and conservatism would ever adopt them in a prevalent fashion to begin with? Why even bother?
The most interesting innovations in speaker development are coming from the pro sector, and it has been so for decades. From my chair and with a select offering they are both better sounding, more robust, physically much more capable, cheaper, more plain/industrial looking and, yes, bigger.
@hilde45 --
+1

