Yes, DCRaw is a command-line app.
You'll get a list of all parameters with dcraw (without any parameters), you should run it manually from a cmd prompt:
Raw photo decoder "dcraw" v8.95
by Dave Coffin, dcoffin a cybercom o net
Usage: c:/windows/dcraw.exe [OPTION]... [FILE]...
-v Print verbose messages
-c Write image data to standard output
-e Extract embedded thumbnail image
-i Identify files without decoding them
-i -v Identify files and show metadata
-z Change file dates to camera timestamp
-w Use camera white balance, if possible
-a Average the whole image for white balance
-A <x y w h> Average a grey box for white balance
-r <r g b g> Set custom white balance
+M/-M Use/don't use an embedded color matrix
-C <r b> Correct chromatic aberration
-P <file> Fix the dead pixels listed in this file
-K <file> Subtract dark frame (16-bit raw PGM)
-k <num> Set the darkness level
-S <num> Set the saturation level
-n <num> Set threshold for wavelet denoising
-H [0-9] Highlight mode (0=clip, 1=unclip, 2=blend, 3+=rebuild)
-t [0-7] Flip image (0=none, 3=180, 5=90CCW, 6=90CW)
-o [0-5] Output colorspace (raw,sRGB,Adobe,Wide,ProPhoto,XYZ)
-d Document mode (no color, no interpolation)
-D Document mode without scaling (totally raw)
-j Don't stretch or rotate raw pixels
-W Don't automatically brighten the image
-b <num> Adjust brightness (default = 1.0)
-g <p ts> Set custom gamma curve (default = 2.222 4.5)
-q [0-3] Set the interpolation quality
-h Half-size color image (twice as fast as "-q 0")
-f Interpolate RGGB as four colors
-m <num> Apply a 3x3 median filter to R-G and B-G
-s [0..N-1] Select one raw image or "all" from each file
-6 Write 16-bit instead of 8-bit
-4 Linear 16-bit, same as "-6 -W -g 1 1"
-T Write TIFF instead of PPM
There are also graphical user interfaces for DCRaw out there, google for "DCRAW GUI"...
You can also put the dcraw.exe in the folder with your image & drag/move the image file with the mouse to the dcraw.exe - it takes some seconds, then you'll get a .ppm file which can be opened in most apps...