fwiw I don't doubt that many silver printers, and especially some platinum printers, accomplish results that few could approach with inkjet. And reverso.
The OT started this thread with an intentional challenge related to inkjet printing. The OT imagined that, with a loupe, dot patterns could be detected in inkjet prints. While that's certainly true with some skillsets and papers and tonal goals, as well as mural sized enlargements, I think it's equally true that some inkjet papers (e.g. Epson's current "Legacy Baryta") can resolve and define grain more clearly ("better") than can glossy silver papers. Grain is of course an important detail when a typically good darkroom printer focuses enlargements.
For people who find sharpness unnecessary, as frequently with "alternative processes", the advantages of inkjet may be irrelevant. For others, who find detail important, inkjet has the edge (so to speak)
