I'm truly shocked that you would post the only report I've seen that claims the Max and the Sonos One sound better, wait I'm not really shocked. If you aren't actually being paid by Google then maybe you should be..
You will note that I continue to ignore your ad hominem attacks (I have no association with Google) and instead I focus on the actual product which is really what this Community is all about.
So again you are wrong about "the only post.....".
David Pogue, who writes for Yahoo, and was formerly the highly regarded tech writer for the NY Times, attended what appeared to be a "staged" comparison entirely controlled by Apple--he described it as a smart listening session---which of course favoured the HomePod. You can rightly ask whether this staging influenced the reviews from three or four well-known blog sites listed. But he had questions about the accuracy after responses to his Tweet.
So he constructed his own test of the four devices used in Apple's test and you can decide if his test was more accurate and more objective. Apple's test did not set up the four units in an identical manner, making the test subjective and not objective. The Yahoo crew who reviewed the four units included a sound recordist, a professional violinist, a home-maker, a sound technician and a couple of young listeners.
Conclusion: Of the 5 ratings, three found the Sonos One the best, two found the Google Home Max the best and no one found the HomePod the best.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/head-head-apple-homepod-really-sound-best-160346138.html
I'm looking forward to this hitting the Irish market. Don't need an Adobe Sub anymore, so will likely try Apple Music with it as well.
Only negative review I've read for the sound quality is that Consumer Report one sofar. Saw the folks at r/audiophile are singing praises for the sound quality over all.
Would be nice if it had a connection for Windows Systems as well. Would have liked to try two at my windows system in stereo.
....and now the Yahoo News report from the highly regarded David Pogue. Also he says regarding the intelligence in the HomePod: "that the HomePod isn’t as smart as the other smart speakers (among other problems, its voice control is limited to iTunes and Apple Music — no Spotify)".
It's also worth noting that the CR review was done in an anechoic listening room. This is fine and dandy if you buy speakers to use in a treated studio but that is not 99.999% of people and the design of the HomePod is based around actively using/working with a reflective environment (i.e. a normal kitchen/living or bedroom), not an unreflective one.
According to the Yahoo News article by David Pogue, it seems that Apple created what you describe as an "anechoic listening room" when it asked reviewers to compare the four competing units. His own test seemed more like the "reflective environment" you desire.
Does that create bias in the reviews from Verge and others based entirely on the Apple listening room set up? And the differing set ups for each device?
Hmmmm....