What a bipolar or omni speaker does is create a more powerful, diffuse reverberant field that also more closely approximates the tonal balance of the direct sound. The result is more realistic timbre, a less fatiguing sound (as the brain isn't working to integrate the direct sound with a wrong-sounding reverberant field), and often less precise imaging. At a given price point, the bipolar or omni speaker is competing with conventional speakers that have less of their budget devoted to multiple drivers and so can use better quality individual drivers.
The Audio Artistry speakers were dipoles, not bipoles, up to the tweeter. Maggies and electrostats are also dipoles. A dipole has, in my building and listening experience, a couple of advantages over biopoles and monopoles - namely, less boxiness and less room-induced coloration in the bass (except of course in the case of hybrids that use a conventional woofer).
Wolcott Audio makes an ingenius omnidirectional speaker that uses a single dome tweeter.
The Audio Artistry speakers were dipoles, not bipoles, up to the tweeter. Maggies and electrostats are also dipoles. A dipole has, in my building and listening experience, a couple of advantages over biopoles and monopoles - namely, less boxiness and less room-induced coloration in the bass (except of course in the case of hybrids that use a conventional woofer).
Wolcott Audio makes an ingenius omnidirectional speaker that uses a single dome tweeter.