If you drive a car, you've demonstrated being willing to spend time learning a tool to take advantage of something being more efficient (than walking).
There is a tradeoff between efficiency and learnability, in some cases learning the tool pays off.
https://statetechmagazine.com/article/2013/08/visual-history...
Look at the image of 2.0. There is permanent screen space dedicated to:
- Open
- Print
- Save
- Cut
- Copy
- Paste
I'm guessing you know the shortcuts for these. You learned the tool.But by taking up so much space, these are given the same visual hierarchy as the entirety of the word 'Wikimedia'!
>Configurable options are certainly a good approach for those that know the tool well, but the default state shouldn’t require “learning.”
In practice, IME, this just means there being combinatorially many more configurations of the software and anything outside the default ends up clashing with the rest of the software and its development.