Hi Duke,
I agree the AR Magic speaker was a smart idea. I would have thought it would have had follow-ons, especially now that the necessary electronics are inexpensive and more capable. The flexibility of the Harman room is that it can be programmed to shuffle speakers where we want. If a speaker is specifically designed as the "magic" speaker was, it would be shuffled into a stereo L or R location closer to a wall.
The reproduction of stereo has been seriously handicapped by a segment of the industry that believes that "sound stage and imaging" are dominated by the loudspeaker, or the wire, or the spikes, or the power cord . . . They assume that all the information is in the recordings, waiting to be liberated by the right tweak. Just as the timbre of recordings is determined by the highly variable monitor speakers being used, and the room they are in, so is presentation of localizable images and spaciousness. These are determined by mics, mic positioning, and greatly by the sometimes massive signal processing done while mixing - listing to loudspeakers in a control room, or nowadays, possibly a converted bedroom or garage.
My late friend John Eargle - to whom I dedicated my book - was a remarkable combination of musician, recording engineer, acoustical engineer, loudspeaker designer, writer . . . He once told me that in some of his classical recordings, when a solo instrument needed a bit of highlighting, he would put a mic on it and in the mix, add in the appropriate electronically generated reflections and reverb to make it fit into the context of the rest of the orchestra. It was so tastefully done that even knowing it did not allow it to be detected. The harpsichord, or whatever, just was more clearly audible. Of course, this was done in the recording control room, and was not at all a "natural" acoustic phenomenon. He would chuckle, knowing that if some purist audiophiles knew this they would be revolted.
Just as tone controls are truly needed to correct for spectral imbalances in many recordings, adjustable speakers or room acoustics can be useful to create the sound stage and imaging in the playback of recordings that listeners favor. To assume that all recordings can be treated equally is naive.
The audibility of power compression in its many variations probably could use some more research to define what is audible and what is tolerable. The magnet heating that you describe is important in pro audio sound reinforcement systems where the loudspeakers are required to work at or close to their design limits for long periods. Such heating and cooling has a very long time constant. This is not the case in most home systems. Although the modification of motor strength through magnet heating is a factor, most of the audible effects are from voice coil heating, which has a much shorter time constant. I just saw a test of a high-end audiophile speaker that in going from an average level of 70 dB (loud conversation, background music) to 90 dB (a moderate crescendo, or foreground rock listening) lost about 4 dB in output over about 3 octaves in the mid-high-frequency range. It became a different loudspeaker at different listening levels.
There appears to be nothing about the sound of the M2 that is attributable to it having a horn. It sounds as it measures - very neutral. The best cone and dome loudspeakers are likewise very neutral. Neutral is good, because it means that coloring resonances are not present. However, such excellence does not mean that all recordings will sound good - you will hear the problems as well as the virtues. If a particular recording does not sound right, try the tone controls - I do, and it often works. The notion that tone controls are abhorrent is another "head in the sand" idea.
So, where does this leave us? For sound stage and imaging, maybe we want adjustable loudspeakers or room acoustics. For accurate sound quality, maybe we want tone controls. If we are fussy.
Floyd