Stokjoc, suggest you revisit your orignal post and pay close attention. You specifically referred to advertising in "Stereophile" -- general ads that got you excited about a product but contained no price. No wonder you are confused with $1500 and $15,000 products.
Your post describes your emotional letdown when it turned out that the product that you thought was $1500 was actually more like $15,000 (I suspect that you were being firgurative in this analogy, or at least hope so). This was what my response was based on.
Of course I like the fact that Audiogon has prices listed, because this is in effect the *classifieds*. Ads with prices are what I expect to find here. And, this is my point. Some ads are designed to get attention, generate interest, perhaps educate and definitely entice. The fact that manufacturers don't list prices in these ads is not an indication of "lack of nerve" or "something being fishy". Others, like classifieds or retail ads, focus on price and product description. Apples and oranges -- or at least oranges and tangellos.
Like a lot of threads, this one has veered off the original point. Yeah, I think that it is a lame nit-pick to complain that the *image* ad that turned you on had no price in it. And, that you are upset *with the ad* because you had no idea that the product was $15,000 and not $1500. In your world, I guess that is the fault of the ad. Like I said "get real". Ads that don't have prices are a fact of life. What a gray world it would be if *all* ads were retail/classified in nature. In the event that you can't reconcile this, I suggest you stick to the classifieds, retail ads and Audiogon (all fine venues that I refer to myself).
Again, refer to your own words in your original post. Also refer to my post. Did I say or imply anthing to the effect that prices were not of value on Audiogon? Did I say that ads with or without prices were of any greater or less value? No, I simply voiced my opinion that this is a lame nit-pick. Given your inability to focus on your own original point, I can understand why you have difficulty with ads that don't clearly spell things out.