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I'm excluding TUI's because you're right, they're pretty different and share some of the ununiformity of GUIs. Still, the command line world remains vast and with that interface you can do a lot, and it is fairly uniform.
That doesn't change the uniformity of the interface. Of course every application will need different parameters. Now do they receive these different parameters via a similar and uniform interface? I say yes. I enter it via keyboard, and for the most part they all use space delimited flags, most of them hyphenated. I'd call that pretty uniform.
To phrase it another way, if all GUIs started using the same names for all parameters, it remains non-uniform interface, and it wouldn't solve 1% of the issue with GUIs.
Out of curiosity, if you don't see the CLI world as more uniform, why do you use it and for what benefit do you prefer it?
I use the CLI because it's keyboard-focused (though I use lots of mouse-enabled TUIs) and because it's programmable.
Generally though, I kind of get what you're trying to say, but 'uniformity' feels like an unfortunate choice in the context of your question, as the meaning can be very arbitrarily defined, hence the confusion. I could, for example, claim that GUIs are more uniform because all chat apps, browsers etc... are so similar to each other that once I've learned one I can use all.
Which is why It'd probably be better if you tried to reword your initial question avoiding that term, focussing more on describing the desired benefits of your definition of uniformity.
Otherwise I'd point towards voice recognition, as that's very similar to a CLI, but probably not what you had in mind, I'm guessing?