Digital x-overs don't eliminate the need for knowledge and measurement, but they do eliminate some of the problems of passive high level x-overs.
For instance, you may not have to worry so much about some of the driver parameters since you're driving it straight from the power amp and can have a much lower impedance looking at the driver.
You will have an amplifier channel per driver, so there will be less interaction. (At the amplifier side and the driver side of things.)
If you set a given slope, you will get very close to that slope electrically. That isn't as true with passive high level x-overs.
It may also be easier to work with enclosure effects, since they won't be throwing off your x-over nearly as much.
Where it really gets interesting is that there's the possibilty of using drivers that don't work well with 1st-order x-overs. (I feel that standard high-order x-overs have major problems, especially with phase response.) We may be able to use a very steep x-over and correct the phase and time response so that it sums to a piece of wire, like 1st-order x-overs do.
For right now, I lean towards well-damped drivers that are "stiff enough." These won't have the peaky resonances that most stiffer drivers do. (Yes, they do have a broader, low amplitude resonance.) I feel this is less objectionable than the approach of using drivers with peaky resonances. It works out quite well with 1st-order x-overs too.
The stiffer diaphragms that you get with metal cones or domes can be more linear than the "stiff enough" drivers - within a limited frequency range.
Something like DEQX may well make it possible to employ more linear drivers, but still accurately reproduce a transient waveform.
You'll have to know the characteristics of the drivers and enclosure. That will allow you to make intelligent choices. You've got sharp x-overs to keep the drivers from getting into trouble. Then you have to adjust _the entire system_ for the best performance. It's still a "sum of the parts" situation, so you have to know what the end result is. As someone pointed out, you can't just slap in a "perfect" x-over and expect the end result to be perfect too just because of that.
A further issue is the increasing availability of computer software for designing things. There's a marked tendency to build the expert knowledge into the software. It makes things easier in some ways for good engineers. But it can also to some extent cover up the mistakes of a duffer. It can even reduce flexibility for the sake of uniformity and ease of use.
I think word processors are a good example. They allow almost anyone to produce uniformly mediocre documents. They correct some of your mistakes, but you never gain the knowledge needed to produce really excellent documents, and they may not even allow you to produce anything that's superb.
The moral of this story is that there are no panaceas.
