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This assumes the developer bothered to make that setting available through the UI.
With the terminal, that isn't a problem: You're using the same UI as the developer.
That assumes the programmer bothered to make user friendly flags... The terminal doesn't magically just work.
With open source, the delineation between "user" and "programmer" is arbitrary and capricious. The GUI-centric Windows approach reinforces that artificial distinction; the terminal breaches that barrier.
Are you suggesting users with no programming experience can simply add the flags they need to a terminal application but would be unable to do the same with a GUI because the GUI is the barrier? Not the logic and that the program will do with the flag, but the GUI is the barrier?
What are you saying?
Yeah, why not? I'll go ahead and make that suggestion.
I mean, the terminal allows them to ctrl-c, ctrl-v a simple solution developed by someone else, even if that someone else didn't bother to build out a GUI for applying their changes.
The convoluted steps they would have to take to achieve the same effect with a GUI would seriously hinder the GUI-only user.
What I am really saying, though, is that the problem of "needing to use the terminal" is not actually solved by ensuring that every possible setting can be accessed and manipulated with a mouse.
I'm saying that the best way to solve this "problem" is by pushing the user to expect and even demand the terminal. Distros should autolaunch a terminal window at startup. Put it right out there, front and center. Invite the novice user to interact with it with friendly little toys like fortune, cowsay, sl, toilet, espeak. The insane usefulness of the various shell tools are more than enough to keep them using it.