I ended up converting my formal dining room into a computer/audio room and it turned out pretty good. Here's what it looks like...

Based on mode calculations the room isn't too bad. At least two of the three dimensions are golden. I like that I can open the doors in the back for a more open sound or close them to keep the energy in the room. It sounds good either way.

The corner traps were made this way to keep the wife happy but I have to admit I like the way they look as well. They are full of insulation made from recycled denim and are placed in all four corners to control bass modes. After installing these the room was transformed.
I'm in the middle of finishing absorption panels to go on the remaining wall refection points.

The computer desk and monitor sit between the speakers so that I can integrate all of my media into my audio hobby. Makes working on spreadsheets a little nicer too. I listen from a upright seated position and very near to the cabinets. I can also sit back and distance myself for a better sound stage. The height of the cabinets and location of the tweeter puts the ribbons right at ear level. I've canted the cabinets back so that the drivers maintain phase alignment.

By ear I found this amount of toe in to sound best. They have a very wide dispersion and sound good straight ahead too. If your sitting in the corner chairs your still getting a good sound stage.
The speakers are spaced approximately 5 feet center line and as pictured the chair is 5 feet away from each speaker forming an equilateral triangle. This is where the setup sounds best but they still sound great while using the keyboard.
http://www.cardas.com/room_setup_rectangular_room.php 
This is a good starting point for proper speaker placement. It's designed to minimize room modes that cause reinforcement or cancellations of low frequencies and in effect yield a more even bass frequency response.
Placing speakers or sub woofers near walls and corners will cause those boundaries to reinforce bass and potentially cause room boom. This should always be avoided if possible unless the speaker is designed for corner placement. When it comes to full range speakers (20Hz to 20kHz etc) this becomes even more critical.
In the end, calculations like this are only a starting point. With acoustics there are simply too many variables to go on formula alone. After I finish the remainder of the acoustic treatment I will experiment with speaker placement although I'm pretty darn happy with it as is.
The only break up I hear is when I send the amp into clipping. This can happen pretty easily with 2 watts when the sound is this clear. I love driving these near to the edge cause they can absolutely rock. Rachel would be a better match for these. I'm in the process of building a 7 watt amp.
I've stuck my ear to the end of the horn and I can detect no mid range info, no breathy horn type distortions you might expect. Its just clean fast bass.