@dkime - I agree with pretty much all of your points in the details, but disagree with your conclusion when it comes to DL. I still maintain that NO you should not necessarily change the draw length. Hear me out, as always, the devil is in the details...
I agree that proper biomechanics are critical to the best possible setup - float, stabiliity, alignment, and agree with everything you said about the rear elbow and arm alignment. But here's what you missed. Your front arm and shoulder have an ideal position for proper biomechanics, proper anchor points are important for consistency, and there are other ways to deal with rear arm / elbow alignment.
Let's say you start out with a "Textbook" form on the front side. Straight arm but not hyperextended, knuckles at 45 degree angle, hand relaxed, arm parallel to the ground, shoulder not collapsed, head straight up and down and not tipping forward or back with the string contacting the very tip of your nose with light pressure. I'll use your example, let's say you switch to a Scott Talon and drop your DL 1/2". Then, you either lose anchor points on your nose and/or the corner of your mouth which is bad for consistency and repeatability, or you have to tip your head forward to the string, or you have to collapse your shoulder or bend your arm which is bad for stability and float. A better solution in my book would be to either use a shorter D-Loop, shorten the neck on the release, or if needed, use a bow with a steeper string angle in the first place that allows you more flexibility with D-Loop and anchor. Personally - it's why I prefer long AtA bows, handheld releases with no neck (picture coming) and why I run my wrist releases extremely short (picture coming). As they all give you the flexibility of running your anchor further forward while maintaining "correct" draw length, and then adjusting rearward as needed using D-Loop.
So - basically, I don't think compromising the front arm and shoulder or your anchor / reference points is the right solution to get your rear elbow and arm in the right place.
Now, if someone has a short ATA bow with steep string angle that they're not changing, already runs a pretty short D-Loop, and wants to use a handheld or a wrist with a longer neck - then you might be S.O.L., but adjusting form via the DL has other downstream compromises
(And Before anyone jumps all over me, there are also exceptions for arm clearance with heavy clothes, shoulder or biomechanical problems, etc.... There's always an exception)