@lanx0003 I don’t blame AI "personally". AI reads what’s out there and summarizes it, but can’t properly recognize groups and concepts. Are the sources useless? Well, I looked at them and they seem to be, for the most part.
AI put out categories in a list such as Home High End Audio and Premium Audio as two distinct categories and it did the same with headphones.
These are interchangeable and overlapping terms used by two independent sources but also apples and oranges as one also includes car audio? Once it can’t figure out what "audiophile" is, it totally goes off the rails with numbers about 10 times of the actual size of the market. It pulls data from an article that lists
Panasonic (Japan)
Soni (Japan)
Clarion (Japan)
KEF (U.K.)
Volkswagen (Germany)
Rockford (U.S.)
Acura (U.S.)
Bowers & Wilkins (U.K.)
Pioneer (Japan)
Bose (U.S.)
Dynaudio International (Denmark)
as premium audio. Only 3 of the 11 companies have any relationship with audiophile stuff. Totally misleading. I could go and on on what’s wrong with the AI answer. The audiophile market is defined by what audiophiles consider what it is. An obvious joke is Bose, it’s huge but it’s not audiophile, so let’s not add their revenue to the sum.
Again, AI can read but it can’t judge. Yet.
I should add that the businessresearchinsights seems to have been written by AI. It is, every single word - a useless word salad. I feel stupider after reading it.