On a more general topic...let's zoom out for a bit.
I've been in this industry for a long time, before home recording was even possible for anyone other than Les Paul and ultra-rich stars. A traditional recording studio was hellishly complicated, so much so that no artist stood a chance without a professional producer, engineer, and often a tape op to make things work.
To me, technology is a necessary evil (albeit an often enjoyable one) that allows translating abstract artistic concepts into something tangible. Although I am facile with technology, I want any tool to be as simple as possible to use.
Complication gets in the way of the creative process, and those who have seen my "Recording on the Fast Track" seminar know the physiological basis of why this is so.
Being "professional" is no excuse for a tool to be convoluted. There's an old saying that "a professional makes it look easy." I couldn't agree more.
Long before Style Dials existed, I created about 30 single-knob effects using FX Chains that I could drop into a track during the creative process. I didn't want to have to tweak effects (or even call up presets until I found the right one), I wanted to make music. Those one-knob effects have been tremendously helpful for having a more "finished" sound even when songwriting. (Often during the more analytical mixing phase I'll replace them, but not always.)
As to people who look disparagingly on a new generation of musicians as button-pushers, boot up Traktor with NI's S4 and see how far you get...music is evolving, and I think for the better because new directions in music become additive. Yes, I played Carnegie Hall and produced/engineered many classical albums, and yes, I started doing "button pushing" DJing in 2000. But both of those have helped tremendously in giving me perspective in
rock music production and songwriting.
I'm still either stupid enough or smart enough to believe music can change the world, and artistic expression is something that everyone should have the option to enjoy. In my ideal world, we would have world-class professional tools that would be so intuitive you wouldn't need a manual. We're far from that goal, and maybe it's unattainable. But, I certainly won't fault Cakewalk - or the majority of other software manufacturers who strive for the same goal - for trying.