Sure. Every extra option makes the interface more complex, which reduces
learnability and memorability for the system as a whole. (In
pathological cases it can reduce efficiency too, if popular options are
buried alongside obscure options in a deep hierarchy. Evolution's and
OpenOffice.org's preferences are unfortunate examples of this.) Every
extra option also makes the code more complex, which makes it more
likely to have bugs, reducing satisfaction.

That doesn't mean all options are bad. Sometimes an option would improve
efficiency or satisfaction for some fraction of existing or potential
users; and the improvement and the fraction may, together, be large
enough to outweigh the option's disadvantages. (For example,
accessibility options may be useful for very few people, but they can
make a dramatic difference to whether those people can use the system at
all.) So a proposal to add an option is most likely to be successful if
it makes some effort to describe what sort of people would benefit, and
how they would benefit. Just saying "It's a usability issue" is
unhelpfully vague.

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