I think it's great you'll do more articles on room correction systems. Please consider the following topics for future articles:
1) One button solutions are great when they correct a room/playback system appropriately, but not great when they don't. The mystery for many users is to be able to tell when the one button solution isn't appropriate, and to do so before buying a one button solution as well as after trying one.
- defining "appropriate" must also be done simply and effectively. For example, don't boost any frequency more than something like 10 dB to prevent frying speakers at high volumes. Or whatever you think is meaningful for a definition. But then if one applies such a rule of thumb then the overall frequency response is disappointing, then one must do other things.
2)When a one-button solution isn't appropriate, then what to do? I think Jriver with its convolver and REW/Acourate/Audiolense/Dirac have come a long way. Or something like miniDSP and any of those applications.
- while these alternatives are more complicated because they are not one-button solutions, you really only need to run through the correction process once per system (until you change audio components or rooms or redo rooms), and hiring a local pro to run through this kind of one-time process and using much or all of one's existing A/V equipment with a miniDSP can be cheaper than or about the same cost as buying a new one-button solution that doesn't work so well.
3) Target curve recommendations. I think there is one basic curve for relatively high volumes (B&K house curve), and a slightly different one at low volumes (B&K house curve with boosted low frequencies).
In short, room correction is great, but it feels like one needs to know ahead of time the best way to go about it, but without the info to make the best decision. If money is no object then this isn't a problem, but the more money matters, the larger this dilemma becomes.
Out of the box recommendation: I think room correction is a high growth area for many listeners, but no one website pulls it all together with room correction advice for any situation. Perhaps you become that one. Hometheatershack is awesome for REW and minDSP, but no so much for other solutions. avsforum has quite a bit on Audyssey and a little on REW, but not much on anything else. "Mitchco" is awesome over at computeraudiophile (and in my estimation vastly underappreciated) in all areas related to room correction, so maybe you could get "mitchco" to be an expert mod here to help cover all aspects and situations in a way no other website currently offers.