Well, I just grabbed the bottle of dip sticks for urine testing - pH/protein/glucose - and wandered down to the darkroom...
I use RO water from home which comes from my 200' deep well in 'chunks' (harder than the hubs of hell loaded with calcium and iron salts), goes through a salt water softener, then through the RO unit...
The pH of this water is ~5.0.. It has been in plastic gallon milk jugs for a week or more...
Then I tested the water from a 5 gallon jug of commercially supplied drinking water (which we drink from here at the office)... This is also a plastic jug, but certainly less permeable than the milk jugs... The water has been in the jug for weeks, at least...
The pH of this water is ~5.5... I assume this is RO water also...
On the bright side, there were no traces of protein or glucose in either water samples...
This RO water works just fine in my darkroom chemistry, and while an RO-distilled-deionized sequenced water source might be better I see no reason for any sudden changes... I am aware that the chemistry lab at the university uses commercial drinking water in 5 gallon jugs from the same vendor I use here at the office, for their life sciences labs, so I am in good company...
As far as the boiling water routine, I don't bother... The dissolved gases I drive off will magically reappear as I decant the water from one jug to another and stir the heck out of it mixing the chemicals <shrug> ....
Nearly 50 years ago my chemistry instructor called water the universal solvent... The passage of time has not proven any of his many aphorisms to be incorrect... He was a wise man...
denny