I agree. It used to be the case that SLRs were the camera to be seen with, but a substantial minority, perhaps even a majority of purchasers, didn't know how to use one. So when Program mode and other auto settings came along they could be seen with a 'professional' camera, and have pictures that 'came out' to impress their family, without troubling with all those dials. I bet a large number never moved off P mode for their entire lives, and as long as a majority of their photographs were okay, they were happy. Nothing wrong with that, but the shots they took were indistinguishable from a point and shoot which would have fit in their purse/pocket.
Most innovations were obstacles for people who knew what they were doing, or at least added cost, weight and complexity. It took years for autofocus to work as people imagined it originally should, and the first couple of generations were risible. Slow kit zooms - another fashion people thought they needed over a standard prime - and dull conditions must have been an exercise in frustration, when excellent fresnel screens that would focus in a moment had been available for years. And so it went on, and still does.
Each to their own and all that, but most camera technology from the eighties until digital came along was a solution in search of a problem.