The pros are a narrower front baffle, for better imaging, like a mini-monitor. The cons are they require a little more care in setting up. If the woofers fire into the wall they can overpower the sound. Many manufacturers are going this direction now. Audio Physics, Canton and my Vienna Acoustics to name a few. They try to better blend a monitor/subwoofer in one cabinet. The days with all front firing drivers in a rectangular box seem to be dwindling. Even speakers that have all forward firing drivers tend to not be rectangular, going with a form of pyramid shape. The main goal is to make the front baffle as small as possible to eliminate early reflections that can muffle the sound a tad. My Strauss' have 10" side-firing woofers crossed over at 70 hz. So they are basically subwoofers, and low frequency is not directional, meaning humans cannot detect where the sound is coming from. That is why subwoofer placement isn't as critical as speaker placement. I have my woofers facing in. I've found that when facing out they had too much wall reflection and the bass was a little overpowering and slow. It is tighter and quicker when firing in, IMHO. My previous speakers had 10 forward firing woofers and a wider front baffle (12" compared to 7.7" wide)than my current ones. My current speakers image better, meaning I can locate instruments within the soundstage better than with the other ones. They almost image as well as the best small monitors, but with much better bass. I hope this was somewhat helpful.
Regards,
John
Regards,
John