Just a note: digital cable isn't a good way to evaluate a cable manufacturer. This is because digital signals are kind of simple: they are either an On or an Off, and any reasonable wire, from gold-plated time-aligned kryptonite, down to a bent coat hanger, will carry a digital signal accurately.
I wouldn't go that far. The reason why (for example) a high-grade CD transport can sound better than a low-grade one has nothing to do with accurate ones and zeroes - both devices do that fine. The difference is in the jitter level.
Wires don't introduce jitter. Oscillators introduce jitter. All a wire can do to a digital signal is introduce external noise, reflections or db loss, and any halfway decent wire won't experience *any* problems with these, in the lengths that audiophiles use. Now, if you are running three hundred feet of unshielded wire, as happens in computer networks, then you have to start thinking about db loss and noise, but ten feet of decent copper with even minimial shielding and good connectors, gives you an error rate of 0. The whole point of digital is that it's possible to pump it through a wire - and not even very expensive wire - with no loss of precision whatsoever. That's not true of analog signals.
Of course, after the digital signal crosses a wire, there's lots of ways it can get into trouble, which is why there are good DACs and bad DACs. But that's a different story.
Never trust a cable company that talks about how their cable improves digital transmission. That's crap. You can't improve beyond an error rate of 0 and if you aren't getting an error rate of 0 already, it's time to replace the coat hangers with less rusty ones.

(One caveat to all this: Loose or dirty connectors. They can introduce a capacitor effect, which screws up both digital and analog signals, especially long strings of 1's. Never use cheap connectors on any signal you care about, musical, network or otherwise.)
Look inside any quality hardware - Bryston is a fine example. Is that time-aligned, silver/irdinium alloy, unobtanium-coated micrograined wire they use in there? Nope. They use copper. And they wouldn't, if something else was better.