Are many of you out there in the community using this? I opened it up recently for the first time and noticed you can set the listening distance from the speakers and I thought, well, isn't this always going to be a good feature to have since there is always a distance from the speakers? (I listen from one spot, so this does not apply if you move around a lot in your listening place/office/living room etc.). Anyway still listening for subtle differences in sound. And wondering if this is such a significant aspect of listening to music that I should have set it up on the first day rather than stumbling on it out of curiosity. Yes, people will say "Just listen to the music and whatever works for you etc etc," but I am wondering if anyone considers 'room correction' to be either essential or a marked improvement.
I'll also throw this in just for laughs:
"The real hi-fi buff, of course, does know a lot about acoustics. He will study recordings in great depth, far more than I do—but then, I am not a hi-fi buff. He will have special speakers in his living room, and make everything subservient to that. He’ll put the chairs in special positions, and he’ll make sure the carpet is the right size and depth and so on. I’m sure his wife has a terrible time. You’ll go into his room one evening, and he’ll play you a record and say: “Listen to that triangle. Isn’t it fantastic?” Well, it will be fantastic, but as far as I’m concerned, life’s too short for all that. If he is concentrating too much on listening for the triangle, he may be missing out on the piece of music as a whole. The technical may take over from the artistic."
From All You Need is Ears by George Martin (1979)