Of course, I'm sure that many people exclusively shooting jpegs with a good p&s digicam find no need to sharpen in post. The default settings can produce snappier jpegs than a dslr out of the box. That was certainly my experience when I compared jpegs from a Canon Powershot Pro1 to jpegs from a Nikon D5000 at the default settings.
That's just the point....
All RAW images are inherently soft/ Jpgs are processed in the camera with added amounts of sharpening, saturation, etc.
So now we think about what Q-Ultimate does as we open a fresh folder of Raw photos in Qimage.
We have already, by default, (See EDIT Preferences, Raw options) set a baseline of Unsharp Mask type sharpening.
This is set by the user by camera model usually.
We work from this baseline, deciding later.... if that image needs more sharpening.
If we find that every image, all the time, different lighting conditions, needs more sharpening, we can adjust the baseline.
See my snap attached.
Image #100 is the default that you use when you first get your Qimage Ultimate.
Image #097 is my setting that matches MY camera, and the lens I use most.
These settings are not critical nor coarse or impactful.
They are ballpark settings so you hardly see a change if you make a change.
Image #098 is showing you how you can have multiple presets that you can load with a click.
I have a preset for a 20 D and D 60 Canon, plus a 350D, and a Lumix G-1 (Not mine).
So you can see the multi faceted uses of USM on Raw images.
I have a Canon 17-40mm lens that I don't use often enough, that is so sharp, it is scary.
My default setting for USM is on the edge for that lens....
Lots of variables.
That's why I believe you can not make a blanket protocol of adding sharpening to every image after the fact.
Fred