This seems to be what the general printing community is thinking. It is no surprise that they would, since most of the graphic industry publications are hot to praise digital printing even though it is still a small part of the total print production output. The community has never been given the chance to see and understand what improvements are possible to the offset process. This makes decisions for the future difficult.
I wish there were some kind of "Skunk Works" at some of the major printers, where there would have been scientific educated people, who would have been interested in investigating the potential of their offset processes but I have not seen that happening. The rule just seems to be to trust suppliers.
It is also a major problem that some of the so called engineers in the printing industry, who have come out of graphics programs, are not really engineers. They are technologists at best. Even some schools that claim to provide a print engineering program, seem to produce a lot of people with no imagination or the ability to analyze physical systems. They seem incapable of using first principles to understand a process. They mainly are taught about technologies from professors that also don't understand how to think. It is a form of technical inbreeding.
Gordon, todays "The Decision" goes deep into the problem that those in the industry face.