History
Audioholics was founded by Gene DellaSala in 1999. DellaSala says the website was born after being frustrated with dishonest hardware specifications from certain manufacturers. Gene takes more of a "real world" approach to audio/video (A/V) performance reviews with an emphasis on educating consumers. In the decade since 1999, Audioholics.com grew from an A/V hobby website to the world's most trafficked home theater audio and video website with over 1.2 million monthly readers. Audioholics also maintains the largest and most engaged social media presence in the AV Industry with over 100k active subscribers on their Facebook page reaching over 600k people/mo and over 170k YouTube subscribers with over 1 million minutes/mo watched on their myth busting, how-to and product review videos. The combined reach of ALL of the Audioholics properties is > 2 million readers/mo. In 2003, Audioholics hired a web developer to migrated the site into a content management system and frame it into the website we know today. During this time, Audioholics' traffic began to grow. The Audioholics AV magazine began increasing the amount of both industry news and product reviews, and expanded its reviewer staff and site-wide content rapidly. By 2006, Audioholics had become one of the most widely read home theater publication and had added more writing staff, which allowed the site to expand content into consumer electronics industry news and often-colorful editorial. That same year,Critical reception
Audioholics has been both praised and criticized for its skeptical approach to consumer hi-fi reviews. Avoiding concepts such as what it calls ''myths'' in audio, Audioholics has instead carved a niche for itself by relying on measurable, reproducible data to review audio / video equipment against manufacturer product specifications. Audioholics had been known for debunking myths on interconnects and speaker wire, and the website famously drew the ire of Monster Cable with criticisms about the company's claims and business practices. The website's investigative reports uncovered a cloned Blu-ray player from Lexicon and was the first to draw a link between 3D HTDV and the shelving of the Sega VR headsets in the 90s due to safety concerns for children.Audioholics store
In 2007 Audioholics announced a partnership with Woodland Venture Capital funded by Bob Pozen, former CEO / Founder ofReferences
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