You are right, but keep in mind "Corrected" response, and "flat" response are:
a) Both terms are relative, so you have to consider the "to what extent"..
b) The two are not mutually exclusive, you can have corrected but not that flat, or flat and yet not even corrected.
If you read the conclusions, it did cover the following:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B97zTRsdcJTfY2U4ODhiZmUtNDEyNC00ZDcyLWEzZTAtMGJiODQ1ZTUxMGQ4/view?hl=en
- Less preferred products had less smooth and extended in-room frequency responses; this was associated with more negative comments related to lack of bass (thin),brightness, and coloration
- Flat in-room response is not the optimal target response (program may be a nuisance variable)
Audyssey got bashed on forums to no end as more people learnt about "The Harman work..". Harman did not identify any of them, but most people guessed RC6, the worse performer, was Audyssey. Fair or not, that probably helped Audyssey in the end, as it might have forced them to become more practically minded in developing their XT version as well as the Editor App. Note: I am not saying RC6 is them, in theory, no one knows for sure, that except Harman, who, imo did the right thing not identifying any.
The fact is, owners of recent D&M models that come with Audyssey XT32 Sub EQ, and if they use the App, they can now do the following:
- disable the notorious BBC dip.
- limit the correction/eq range to below 300 Hz (or whatever the user prefers).
- reshape the target curve if they are willing to take the time and experiment.
Combined with the much higher filter resolution and the more powerful DSP engines, the negative findings by Harman on their product that was most likely the XT version at best may no longer apply, though I am sure it still won't come close to RC1 and RC2, i.e. Harman's own lol..
I wish Harman would do a follow up using similar or further improved protocol and still include the top 5 (based on user base) using their most up-to-date versions. Or hopefully Matthew can do something similar even if in much reduced scope as he likely has much less resource than Harman.