I see what you're saying, but the X-59 looks like a dead-end in terms of configuration for quiet SSTs. It is impractical to scale it to an airliner with any economic payload.
So even if it does demonstrate sonic 'thump' instead of boom, a new raft of research will be needed to find practical designs that can implement that capability economically. So... what's the X-59 really contributing?
With the exception of the super extended nose, the X-59 generally resembles several different Supersonic transports or business jets. The real question is:
"where do we need to put engines on full sized transports?" (as opposed to Business Jet sized craft)
Let's go big and take the Boeing 2707-300 (that's the production cathedral wing version, not the swing-wing) and stretch the nose out 100ft or so for boom control. It
would require some new, longer jetways to get from the terminal to the plane. IIRC another 3-5 sections of corridor. Which are standardized parts, funny enough. So it's a relatively minor cost adjustment at the airport end, they'd only need to do that to a couple of jetways per airport. NYC-LA or NYC-Seattle are about the only overland routes I see being viable at supersonic speeds, the plane really exists for NYC-London/Paris or LA-Honolulu or LA-Tokyo flights. A 3600nmi flight takes about 3 hours, a bit under 2 hours of that at Mach 2.7 and 65,000ft.
This will haul some 300 passengers at 40" seat pitch (distance from seatback to seatback), but that was 1970 standards for air travel. Modern seat pitch is 32" for economy, which will get us up to about 375 seats or so. A bit light for an aircraft weighing more than a 747, but not unreasonable. It's not like airports can really handle more than about 350 passengers per plane arriving at one time anyways, so that's fine.
I'd use the longer nose to justify putting the nose gear
directly under the pilot's seat, which would address a ground operations issue with the 2707. Driving the 2707 on the ground is weird because the pilot's seat is well forward of the NLG, some 60ft(!), so the swing in turns is rather extreme.