Ronboco, no need for embarrassment! We are all learners trying to help each other enjoy the music. Eric's comments above with respect to REW are correct. REW can be used to develop equalization files, but I are not advocating that use. I'm advocating its use as a sophisticated measurement tool that allows you to understand what your speakers are doing in your room. It allows you to make highly informed choices about the tradeoffs that result from positioning decisions, absorption and diffusion decisions, and other system changes including placement of subwoofers, phasing of those subwoofers, etc.
I have nothing against digital room correction. I use a Lyngdorf 2170 in my living room, where I don't want a bunch of subs and I don't want to install conventional absorption and diffusion panels. I do not, and probably will not, use DRC in my dedicated listening room.
If you plan on using a receiver that offers DRC, then there is no harm in trying it and seeing what it does. The key word there is "see." Seeing requires measuring. Measuring requires REW. As I said, every decision you make involves tradeoffs.
I have nothing against digital room correction. I use a Lyngdorf 2170 in my living room, where I don't want a bunch of subs and I don't want to install conventional absorption and diffusion panels. I do not, and probably will not, use DRC in my dedicated listening room.
If you plan on using a receiver that offers DRC, then there is no harm in trying it and seeing what it does. The key word there is "see." Seeing requires measuring. Measuring requires REW. As I said, every decision you make involves tradeoffs.