I think the /s means sarcasm, but not sure what specifically you aren't sure about?
I think you were making fun of HLG, right? That's fine.
HLG has a dominant marketing advantage with home growers because of their introduction of the QB form factor, so your average home grower who is WAY behind on basic LED tech is gonna know them and look at HLG as the leading edge.
It's a high quality product for what it is, and HLG did a lot to move LED canna growing forward from the bad old days where snake oil diode pimps sold fixtures with power ratings that had nothing to do with the wattage of the driver, and the spectrum of their rainbow diodes were kept secret.
That doesn't mean HLG is the best right now, and their rate of innovation is behind some others.
The last improvement to diodes that HLG did was to start using 3535 die
Samsung LH351H 660s instead of Cree or Osram 3030s. More output (per diode and per watt). Besides that, HLG improved distribution of light by spreading out the QBs to reduce hotspots. All good stuff of course, but they had to do that to compete with the more even light spread provided by strip setups in the typical 8 foot ceiling/tent application.
HLG doesn't have any advanced spectrum tuning capability right now. As a matter of fact, i don't think they even let you turn off the 660s on their units that have them. So yeah, they are behind.
There is still a lot of "flash" involved in chinese marketing of "disco boards" with "UV" 395, 430 royal blue, and "IR" 730 diodes in addition to the staple 660s, all integrated with the white LM301s and often not controllable discretely.
The specific spectrum of UV that should be used, and the benefit of using it is still being debated. Most research suggests the diodes on the "disco" boards are not the right spectrum (UV-B seems to be the choice of some of the better minds I've spoken to, not the 395 UV-A that most chinese boards lightly scatter on the PCB.)
UV-B LEDs are not available anywhere that I can find, so it makes sense that they would throw UV-A on there to satisfy buzzword driven buyers seeking the new-new.