If my question was "How do I achieve <this>", or "How can I improve <this> process, instead of using <this> hacky solution I've constructed".
Suppose the first answer I get is:
You can't; what you've done is the best available option.
On the one hand, that answer hasn't really helped me. Unless the person cites (or is!) an authority on the particular subject, all it actually says is "I (the answerer) also don't know of any way to achieve that". The fact that one other person on the internet also doesn't know how to solve this tells me very little.
On the other hand, eventually the absence of any alternate answers becomes circumstantial evidence that there genuinely isn't a way to achieve this. In which case I will mentally "accept" that there isn't any way to do this, and move on with my life :) In which case this answer is correct, and should be rewarded and the record provided for the next user.
So ...
Should I 'Accept' this answer?
If so ... when? What's a sensible period of time to wait for another person to come along who does know a way to achieve it?
There's a difference between not knowing a better solution to an answer and being confident that there is not better solution to an answer.
I assume that you've heard of Duning Kruger :) Not saying it's true of you, but "someone on the internet confidently asserts that they know it can't be done" just isn't reliable info.