Don't see any evidence of this other than the software. The computer is off-the-shelf and the power supply as basic as it gets.Bryston, and others have put enormous resources into firmware, parts selection, and the cleanest data path possible.
The software (which you call firmware) is significant and huge effort but alas, yet another proprietary media player/server and apps on tablets. These efforts don't stand a chance compared to solutions provided for multiple platforms such as JRiver and now Roon. This is why many of their users can't wait to get Roon. And once there, the box is just a computer booting Linux and running Linux version of Roon. Why go with a proprietary platform just to get a computer with linear power supply at high cost? What Blizzard is building is a much better bet.