vote up 142 vote down star
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I often use applications and electronic devices for which I think: "Why on earth did they engineer that thing as it is? They must have known that it is a pain in the neck to work with".

On the other hand I often observed that I created a (G)UI that I was convinced about, that it'd delight my customers and was a breeze to work with. Although my customers thought that too, it became obvious that it wasn't at all easy to work with in day-to-day work.

Because of that I believe that there are many developers and designers out there who are genuinely convinced that their product has the perfect user interface, but it hasn't!

That's why I wrote this question: To collect some of the common misconceptions developers have about user interfaces and to prevent other developers (including me) from making the same mistakes.

  • What annoys you most in user interfaces of applications, web sites, electronic devices, etc?
  • What was it that you were convinced would be a great idea—but in the end only annoyed your customers?

EDIT: Please write only one thing per answer so that readers who agree with a certain misconceptions can upvote it separatly from things they don't agree with. As with all soft facts there tend to be controversial opinions. If you put two or more things in a single answer, one might agree with one but not with the others. So please use a separate answer for every separate aspect.

EDIT 2: Please don't write answers about a single application which annoyed you but about concepts and patterns which can be found in many applications and/or devices.

EDIT 3: Thank you for all the feedback. I'll frequently visit this question whenever I think about some new UI feature :)

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My question is not about the worst web usability error. Admitted, they are some similarities but in my opinion this surely is not an exact duplicate. For example this is not about the WORST UI experience, but about COMMON user interface patterns, which are common and sometimes even believed to be good, but in fact are not. – DR Jun 18 at 13:51
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Sorry: I meant "about COMMON bad user interface patterns" – DR Jun 18 at 13:52
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I'm depressed by how UIs in consumer electronics have declined. Menus and pushbuttons have replaced dials and switches, and people put up with it for the extra features and lower cost. TVs, stereos, cameras, etc. I actually see people passing the remotes to other people when they used to be willing to kill to keep it. – Nosredna Jun 18 at 21:49
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152 Answers

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vote up 343 vote down check

Splash screens

Every application, and especially a background service such as a backup application or antivirus software, must display a splash screen that can not be turned off in settings.

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+1 I wish I could upvote twice – DR Jun 18 at 7:42
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+1 Especially for the virus app... it's already bad enough we have to have a resident scanner running at all times (which I think is overkill and a serious bottleneck for a developer machine). The thing doesn't have to show itself so prominently each time I restart my machine! – fretje Jun 18 at 8:06
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@MaxVT, in your answer, it is not clear whether you are recommending the splash screen or whether you are annoyed by it. – Geoffrey van Wyk Jun 18 at 10:17
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@GeoffreyBernardo : Recommending of course ! Failure to show a splashscreen might result in the user being able to do something else on his computer instead of stupidly staring at it ... – Brann Jun 18 at 15:47
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Down with splash screens. If you have a splah screen you should be able to hide it. Also no stealing window focus. If I wanted to look atyour damn app I will click on it. – Matthew Whited Jun 18 at 22:04
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vote up 305 vote down

Stealing Focus

  • Annoying update messages that pop up in the foreground and ask to be dismissed.

  • Web pages that grab my cursor from halfway across the password box and stick it back into the username field.

  • Web pages that grab my cursor from typing something in the URL field and stick it into the search box

  • Minimized applications that decide they have something important to tell me.

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+100 ! This is the most annoying thing ever. We all have a lot of softwares running at once. I start a make in Visual Studio, then I start a long File in Find in Ultra Edit, then I add two things to my todo list... and oops, the last enter I hit is stoolen by an error dialog box that just popped - the Enter closed it of course, and I cannot know what it was, grrrr >>>> Developers should never assume their windows or their errors are the most important thing in the world ! Please, never bring a windows to front ! :) – Sylvain Jun 18 at 11:18
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XWindows got this one right. Leave your window wherever it is in the z-stack, show all the dialogs you want, and not impede what the user is doing in the foreground. I see KDE and Gnome bit undoing some of this magic in order to be more "windows like" for grandma. Grrrr. – Chris Kaminski Jun 18 at 11:47
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For me the two worst offenders seem to be Windows ("Would you like to reboot? What about now? Now? Maybe now?") and Firefox (mistyped an URL, hit enter, scrambling to fix the URL and as soon as the page loads, I end up entering half the URL into some cybersquatter's searchbox and going somewhere I don't want to be taken). If I actively select the location bar while a page is loading and start typing, shouldn't it be obvious I DON'T want to select the first input field on the page? – Alan Jun 19 at 14:48
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The worst thing for me is when you get a Yes/No popup and you happen to typing something with a 'y' or 'n' in it. You end up choosing Yes or No without even reading what the option is... – DisgruntledGoat Jun 20 at 23:49
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vote up 227 vote down

Currently my biggest gripe is with web applications that don't honour a browser's culture settings. I'm a native English speaker living and working in Germany, my German is OK but far from fluent. I have my browser's culture set to en-GB but sites (www.google.com to name but one) check my IP address and start serving me up information in German it amazes me that large companies that go to the trouble of creating multilingual sites / applications don't know how to detect a user's culture properly.

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Absolutely agree. Could anyone please write a formal bug report for Google (I'd do one, but I'm not experienced with bug reports)? This behavior breaks HTTP protocol, since servers are supposed to look into Accept-Language to determine which content to serve. – ilya n. Jun 18 at 7:54
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Even if I live in my own country and speak my own language, I still prefer reading my internet in English, and having international results. Google is not the only annoying player: there are various setup programs, Mozilla installation downloads to name a few – Berry Tsakala Jun 18 at 9:17
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It's even worse in Switzerland where there are 3 languages, but IPs can't be mapped accurately, so by default you get German... And quite a lot of Google pages don't have language choice on them, you just have to know to add &hl=en on the end... – Benjol Jun 18 at 12:16
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Perhaps there needs to be a browser setting that professionals in the IT industry can set saying "We really know what we're doing so don't try to second guess us" ;) – Mark Jun 18 at 13:18
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eran, that may be true for that ONE SITE but the purpose of the language setting that gets passed through HTTP is to inform the server what language the user prefers. The setting and protocol is there for a reason. – T Pops Jun 18 at 20:21
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vote up 211 vote down

Having to wait for DVD menus

On DVDs I don't like it when I have to wait for the menu to become active.

Sometimes the viewer has to wait 30 seconds of movie snippets, animations and sometimes even advertising until it is possible to go to the chapter selection menu.

It becomes especially annoying when it is a TV series DVD where you often watch small parts and often start and stop the player.

I guess the designers thought it would be entertaining to watch all that stuff, but after the first time it really annoyes me. After all I just want to watch a movie...

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This is why you should always buy the pirated version :) – pipTheGeek Jun 18 at 11:49
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+1. I paid for that DVD, I shouldn't have to suffer through advertising – Charlie Somerville Jun 18 at 12:08
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What's even worse is DVD player UIs that don't correctly recognize the stop button input during such sequences. This is really frustrating for me, as my DVD changer will not change DVDs unless a stop is issued. – David Berger Jun 18 at 16:15
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I don;t like repeating background music on commercial DVDs – Crippledsmurf Jun 18 at 22:00
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@Charlie Somerville What about 'I paid for that DVD, I shouldn't have to suffer through a long and annoying "do not pirate" announcments!" – johnc Jun 19 at 2:25
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vote up 201 vote down

Hijacking Windows Startup

Look, Adobe. We all know that Acrobat takes 30 seconds to load before it can show us PDFs. It sucks, but we're fine with it.

What's not OK though, is trying to fool us into thinking your thing is fast by instead loading it every time I turn on my computer. It's still 30 seconds of my time you're taking up, but now you're taking it 4 times a day regardless of whether I use your thing.

Shame on you.

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+1 I hate everything that has an unnecessary process running in the background all the time. iTunes, Acrobate, MS Office. Keeping your processes down to the basic essentials plus whatever you're currently running is a real performance benefit, and apps that not only leave processes running after you quit, but re-add them to the startup config must die. – Sean Nyman Jun 18 at 12:59
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If it was only Acrobat doing that... – Benjol Jun 18 at 13:57
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Try Foxit Reader! Its super fast. – Nalandial Jun 19 at 14:31
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Worst of all, they don't use the "Startup" folder that was designed for this. They all use the registry keys. – aib Jun 20 at 4:17
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While we are moaning about Acrobat Reader, how about "why do I have to reboot my machine to complete an update to a document reader?". – David Spillett Jun 20 at 22:07
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vote up 180 vote down

Telling Me About Updates

  • "DUDE!!! It's Java again! Great news! There's another incremental update for you to install! Wanna download it now??? (if not, I'll be sure to remind you again in a few minutes!)"

  • "I know you probably started Firefox because you wanted to browse the web, but first, here are 6 obscure plugins that require your immediate attention. Oh, and we'll need to restart Firefox again before you can actually browse the web."

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Oh by the way, Lnubb jnagf gb frr rirel fvgr lbh ivfvg. You're okay with that, right? – MiffTheFox Jun 18 at 12:48
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Add now Java update wants to install the Yahoo! Toolbar. – Sinan Ünür Jun 19 at 1:12
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Got to agree re: Firefox. Installing updates at startup is simply the worst time to do it. – grahamparks Jun 19 at 10:36
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I don't mind Firefox, actually. Installing and then letting me restart whenever I want doesn't get in my way that much. (Unlike Windows Updates, which, don't even get me started...) – Kev Jun 19 at 13:54
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I think the misconception here is "the user needs to approve each update." I see the security argument, but in practice, maybe .000001% of users have any idea whether the Java update is a good idea. Even Joel Spolsky has said something like "if the Java team isn't sure whether I should update, how the heck am I supposed to know?" I think it's best to have the option to be informed about updates, but the default should be to do it silently in the background. If you care, you'll ask. – Nathan Long Jul 1 at 13:14
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vote up 177 vote down

Utilities that think they should look cool.

I do not need my VPN client to be skinnable and have animations.

It probably doesn't need any UI at all, apart from an on/off switch.

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Motherboard utility apps are very bad for this...yes Abit & Asus I am looking at you two. Stop it already. – Pondidum Jun 23 at 10:51
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I guess for some applications, "our app is skinnable" is an excuse for "we don't want to improve our crappy UI. Let the users do it themselves" – DR Jul 7 at 12:55
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vote up 173 vote down

Bad keyboard support

In UI's which are to be used for data input, it's really annoying that the user constantly has to switch between keyboard and mouse for input. A good UI will have all tab indexes set right and common keys (return, escape) mapped to the appropriate actions.

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hell yeah buddy. – chickeninabiscuit Jun 18 at 8:52
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Consistent accelerator keys for every function (buttons, texts and menu options) are a must. Power users don't use the mouse! – Berry Tsakala Jun 18 at 9:20
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+1. Web application developers who still don't add access keys to their controls (it is web, man, let's click !) should read it :) – Sylvain Jun 18 at 11:04
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StackOverflow has one of these problems: On German keyboards AltGr+Q creates an @, but on StackOverflow, it's bind to insert a blockquote. I always have to enter Alt + 064 (ASCII code). That's annoying. meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/2051/… – furtelwart Aug 5 at 8:37
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vote up 169 vote down

Adding Tray Icons

It's great that you want to "Monitor" my QuickTime usage and all. I mean, you're right, it would be hard for me to determine on my own whether movies were playing or not. But really, couldn't you have asked me first whether this is high enough priority for me to require an icon in my tray 24/7?

If you plan to put useless garbage like this in my system tray, please ask first.

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The better question is why does quicktime have to start on boot and run in the background – Matthew Whited Jun 18 at 22:12
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I at least appreciate that they show themselves. It the sneaky start-up apps I didn't ask for that really annoy me. At least the ones in the tray I can see and know to hunt them down and kill them. – kenj0418 Jun 21 at 0:58
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The better question is why are you using Quicktime? – tsilb Sep 27 at 11:24
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Windows 7 makes this much better. – Jason Baker Sep 27 at 13:39
vote up 159 vote down

Windows that are small and have so much content that you have to scroll in them. While it's impossible to resize the window!

Many of the dialogs in Windows behave this way. Folder options for explorer as example.

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environment variables setup window... come on! even on Vista, you can't resize the darn thing. – MasterPeter Jun 18 at 11:55
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Hah, I feel the same way about the comment box I typing on here here on stack overflow! At least you can resize the box when making a answer or asking a question... – nbv4 Jun 19 at 9:54
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Also the character map utility. – PeterAllenWebb Jun 19 at 15:12
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Visual studio is actually a bad offender in this area -- the keyboard shortcuts window displays about 4 things at once and cannot be resized... :( – Mark Simpson Sep 27 at 13:45
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There's a name for this kind of window: the EULA window. – Kyralessa Sep 28 at 1:40
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vote up 145 vote down

I cringe whenever I see an error message like this:

If you continue to experience difficulties with this application, please see your system administrator.

At that point I start shaking my fist at the computer and the unseen developer. "I am the system administrator and I have no <bleep>ing clue what's going on!"

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I wish I could +100 this! – Martin Jun 19 at 15:20
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"...and ask him to install a different application for you instead." – Nathan Long Jul 1 at 13:19
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+1, but you've just taken me on a guilt trip for all the message boxes I've written in the past few months. – Gavin Schultz Aug 5 at 9:45
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I put this into my exception messages all the time. I'll translate it for the non-developers out there. Basically it means "Sorry, you've encountered an error that I expected might happen but havent had time to deal with yet. This obscure and meaningless error message should buy me some time to write a fix whilst you flounder around helplessly not knowing who to blame. kthx bye." – Alex Oct 10 at 20:59
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vote up 131 vote down

I really dislike "cool" Flash websites that don't give you the slightest idea how to navigate their site until you hover over some image/dot.

Yes, thanks guys - that's the phrase I was looking for: Mystery Meat Navigation - ugh!

Sorry, but Flash designers seem particularly shy of usability knowhow!

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Vincent Flanders of webpagesthatsuck.com calls this "mystery meat navigation." I don't really mind on things like band and art websites, since there is more creative license, but it SUCKS when you're looking for actual info. And yes, I agree, some of the worst websites ever have been the result of someone attempting to be "Edgy", "artistic", and "innovative." – nerdabilly Jun 18 at 12:17
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I've seen at least one site that not only uses MMN, but at the same time varies which link is which between pages. – Stewart Jun 18 at 15:26
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"I really dislike "cool" Flash websites... which could have been done just as well with static HTML" - FTFY :) – Jeffrey Kemp Jun 20 at 4:23
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vote up 125 vote down

Using generic dialog box buttons (ie Yes / No ) instead of rephrasing what the buttons do (ie Save / Don't Save)

Even worse are applications which ask you a question requiring a Yes/No answer, and present you with OK/Cancel buttons.


Edit (from the comments below) :

Are you sure you want to cancel this process? [CANCEL] [OK]

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+1 - What I hate more is applications which ask you a question requiring a Yes/No answer, and present you with OK/Cancel buttons. I know which one you want me to click, and I know it shouldn't bug me, but aaaarrrrggghhhh! – Dominic Rodger Jun 18 at 9:03
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Apple got this often right, Microsoft wrong. That was one litte thing I realized after switching to Mac OS X – Tim Büthe Jun 18 at 10:47
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stackoverflow.com: Are you sure you want to add another answer? You could use the edit link to refine and improve your existing answer, instead. [OK] [CANCEL] – Alex Brown Jun 18 at 19:30
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As bad as it may be, it's how most Windows applications work and personally I'd think that changing this might violate the old design rule "Always do the least surprising thing". – DR Jun 18 at 19:57
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Worst of all are the error buttons which give you one 'choice' - OK. No; it isn't OK that the program is broken. – Jonathan Leffler Jun 19 at 3:39
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vote up 119 vote down

Cluttered user interfaces

bulk rename utility

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This is akin to what Joel writes about in How to Be a Program Manager joelonsoftware.com/items/2009/… : "a completely baffling user interface that makes perfect sense IF YOU’RE A VULCAN (cf. git)". – Sarah Vessels Jun 18 at 18:19
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That belongs on TDWTF – Crippledsmurf Jun 18 at 22:12
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@Charlie: For people that make a living from renaming files... – Nikolai Ruhe Jun 19 at 9:04
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I don't know if I agree. Yes, this looks like a mass of controls, but honestly, if you're using a FILE RENAME UTILITY, every single operation you want to do falls into the 20% of the 80/20 rule. – Stefan Mai Jun 19 at 14:35
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@Stefan: Sure all the functionality is probably useful, but I don't see why it all has to be visible at the same time! After a 10 second glance it's obvious to me they should just have a system where you can add "rules" with a drop down for the type, similar to Outlook's mail filter thing. – DisgruntledGoat Jun 20 at 23:58
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vote up 104 vote down

Progress bar that restarts from the beginning several times during a single operation, which immediately makes it useless. Microsoft Installer, I'm looking at you.

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Progress bars in general... – FogleBird Jun 18 at 22:02
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Progress bars where, upon reaching 100%, you still have wait some period of time before you're able to do anything. – frou Jun 19 at 14:38
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Progress bars that don't show any progress but just zoom a small block backwards and forwards. Hello Mozilla? – richsage Oct 31 at 8:44
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vote up 89 vote down

Unresponsive GUI thread

I hate it when the GUI thread freezes. "This application is not responding..."

Please, do your intensive calculation or I/O in another thread, and keep the UI responsive!


Some people scream at concurrent programming ("multithreading" in these strange days) and prefer unresponsive applications, fearing thread bugs.

But this is a false dichotomy - threading bugs are introduced by cretin threading models. Quoting Joe Armstrong, from The Role of Language Paradigms in Teaching Programming (.pdf):

... Unfortunately, concurrent programming has acquired a reputation of being "difficult" and something to be avoided if possible. I believe this is a side-effect of the problems of thread programming in conventional operating systems using languages like Java, C, or C++. In a concurrent language like Erlang, concurrent programming becomes "easy" and becomes the natural way of solving a large class of problems. ...

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Yes, you Safari! – Nikolai Ruhe Jun 18 at 15:34
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Windows explorer (I mean the filemanager, not IE) and many more Windows, Mac and Linux apps... – abababa22 Jun 18 at 17:17
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You'd think MS could get this right. Half their applications, including the dev tools, all exhibit this behavior. – Chris Lively Jun 18 at 19:34
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I'd rather have an intermittently-unresponsive app than have threading bugs introduced. – finnw Jun 19 at 7:32
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I'd rather have threading bug than unresponsive applications. – aib Jun 20 at 4:24
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vote up 86 vote down
  1. If an update is available for an app, display a modal notification proposing to upgrade.
  2. When a user declines, show it again next time the app is run.
  3. There should be no way to turn this behavior off.

(Acrobat Reader 5 and later and many other apps).

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I'd go so far as to say the WTF here is having update notifications... every piece of software on my system shouldn't need its own updater. Package managers FTW! – rmeador Jun 18 at 15:10
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I wish the update notifications would also correctly distinguish between "download" and "install". iTunes/QuickTime gets me with this every time. Sure, knock yourself out, download away...wait, I have to stop what I'm doing and close the application? – David Berger Jun 18 at 16:13
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4. Instead of actually updating anything, just make the user's web browser go to your download page. – abababa22 Jun 18 at 17:21
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On OS X I wish the system updater were accessible to 3rd parties so that applications wouldn't bug me with their upgrade requests when I'm opening the app. If I'm opening the app, it's because I WANT TO DO SOMETHING NOW PLS KTHNX. I do NOT want to spend 10 minutes upgrading the software, lose my train of thought, or worse, get interrupted halfway through my task so the upgrade can install. At the very least, put the upgrade requests when I QUIT The app, and I'm not interested in using it anymore. – Breton Jun 18 at 23:50
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Why don't we make this simpler and just have an answer "Whatever Adobe does, do the opposite." – JohnFx Jun 19 at 20:41
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vote up 82 vote down

I think that speed or responsiveness is one of the most important UI concepts. I personally hate interfaces that are somehow notchy or rough (I don't know if these are the terms used in English, in German you'd say 'hakelig', which means 'not being smooth') - with Windows Mobile sometimes being a supreme example, or a satellite receiver's on-screen menu that takes half a second after each press of a button.

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In general you are right, but I would prefer an action that takes a second instead of a 10-action sequence where each action returns instantly. – MaxVT Jun 18 at 7:40
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Actually I'm not talking about the speed of the application itself. What I'm talking about are e.g. menues that take some time to open, dialog boxes that stay open some time after a click on OK, animations that aren't smooth and such things. It's no problem if some operation takes some time to complete - but that should be indicated to the user. – Stefan Gehrig Jun 18 at 7:46
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User interaction should be considered to be a real-time problem. – JesperE Jun 18 at 13:06
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You can't even believe how underrated this is... I agree 1000%. Agree Overflow. – Mark Canlas Jun 18 at 21:50
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better adjectives for hakelig -> clunky, jittery, jolty – Shawn Simon Jun 20 at 4:08
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vote up 81 vote down

My favourite class of dialog:

"Are you sure you want to cancel this operation?"

                 "OK" "Cancel"
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stackoverflow.com: says: Are you sure you want to add another answer? You could use the edit link to refine and improve your existing answer, instead. [OK] [Cancel] – Alex Brown Jun 18 at 19:31
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We're all bearing in mind that the interwebs only supports Javascript's prompt(), which only has OK and Cancel, right? – Matchu Jun 29 at 13:41
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@Matchu — A poor excuse, in this case. With libraries like jQuery UI readily available, there's no reason to use plain old prompt() when the buttons are clearly inappropriate. – Ben Blank Jul 6 at 14:24
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And you always have the option to phrase the question in a way that the available answers make sense. – Jens Schauder Jul 13 at 19:11
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vote up 78 vote down

Not allowing white spaces into passwords, or limiting their length !

A custom English sentence is so much easier to remember and harder to guess than a single word password.

Regarding limiting the length of a password, I can't think of a good reason to do that since only hashed passwords (which are constant length) are physically stored ... or are they ?

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Worse, accept spaces when you set your password but reject them in the login form (a popular online bank in the UK does this.) – finnw Jun 18 at 11:04
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Along this same line: disallowed characters. Why on earth would anyone care what characters make up my password? Stupid Stupid Stupid. – Chris Lively Jun 18 at 19:29
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It's silly enough when usernames on websites that WILL NOT EVER use the usernames in URLs force you to use alphanumeric characters and then merely allow a handful of "special characters" (the usual shift+numrow ones) in addition for the password. Why? If something could get messed up in the form submission, it shouldn't matter because I'll send the same garbled mess upon login, no? Even worse: some forums entitise usernames before storing them in 16-char DB columns, cutting of the string and breaking entities. – Alan Jun 19 at 15:02
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I'd put money on the fact that, if a site is restricting you to alphanumerics for your password, or is restricting the password to a bafflingly small length, then they are storing that password in plaintext. – Jeremy Frey Jun 20 at 21:57
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@Chris. If you ever had worked on a helpdesk maybe you would understand. Reason we disallowed special chars in a password fields was cos not so computer minded users where unintentionally inputting '&é§' in their passwords, obviously they want to have a numeric char but kept forgetting to press the shift key simultaneously when working on a laptop. – Mez Jun 27 at 14:39
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vote up 76 vote down

Websites that provide a 'Search' ability for within their own site that doesn't work properly. When Google can search and provide better/more relevant results within your site than you can, there's something wrong (thinking of MSDN here).

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I thought you were talking about SO for a second there... – MasterPeter Jun 18 at 10:26
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+1 Worst example of this I have seen is B&Q. (www.diy.com). Go on, try it, I am at a loss as to how it finds the results. My search for a 13 amp RCD returned a rug as the top result! I don't use B&Q anymore becuase of this. – pipTheGeek Jun 18 at 11:59
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+1. If you can't search your own stuff correctly, then don't bother and let google do it for you. – Chris Lively Jun 18 at 19:25
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visual studio help, I'm editing a 'c' file in a c compiler and I ask for help on printf() - so of course I want the help page for foxpro or asp.net printf. – mgb Jul 11 at 23:25
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vote up 73 vote down

It really annoys me websites that don't allow a link to be opened in a new tab

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Yes. it is really annoying for someone that is used to goggle. I do a search, middle click on the pages i find it may contain what I am looking for and then tab through them all. It makes me crazy when I have a list and I cant do that – Sergio Jun 19 at 8:20
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gmail does this... It's extremely annoying. – voyager Jul 3 at 18:20
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vote up 66 vote down

When the scroll wheel on your mouse is not supported and you have to rely back on old school scroll bars.

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Heck I get used to my 5+ button mice at home so much that I try to click them even at work or else where (I want my back button right under my thumb) – Matthew Whited Jun 18 at 22:17
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This is a problem with a lot of flash web sites! – Nippysaurus Jun 18 at 23:56
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cough VB 6.0 – Charlie Somerville Jun 19 at 7:08
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vote up 65 vote down

A progress bar or a time estimate that changes in a seemingly random fashion (Windows Installer, IE file downloads, Windows' stock file copying box, etc.)

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If you've ever tried to build something like that you'll know it's impossible to get right so the estimated time has any real meaning. So we (as developers) should no longer try. And even if we do, just give a vague indication, never an estimated time in (milli)seconds. – peSHIr Jun 18 at 8:21
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And finally, if you do estimate always overestimate! – Sebastian Krog Jun 18 at 14:29
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My favorite was an installer (I think it's the zenoss installer) with a very smooth and progress percentage bar...except that the last step (occurring at progress 100%) was something like "Configuring the database...this may take a few minutes". – David Berger Jun 18 at 16:19
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@DotNetWill: especially if the graphic is just a gif file or something that has nothing to do with the status of the task being processed. – nbv4 Jun 19 at 10:07
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Wose yet. Progress bars that get to 100% and then drop back down to zero and start over on the next task. I feel cheated when this happens. – JohnFx Jun 19 at 20:44
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vote up 60 vote down

One of the biggest misconceptions is that people think a user interface can be designed by a single person. No matter how much you try to accommodate your users, you simply cannot foresee all situations, so it's important to test the usability of your product. Simply observing users interacting with your (prototype) product can reveal UI problems that you would have never thought of.

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@Juliet - I am not advocating that the eventual design is created by a group of people, resulting in a mix of styles. Rather, I suggest that the process of designing a user interface cannot be done in isolation, separate from the developers, users, graphics artists, product managers, sales department, etc. It requires input from all these angles to create a decent, functional user experience. In the end, it might well be a single person that integrates all this and creates the final design, but his person doesn't develop the interface in isolation. – Daan Jul 7 at 14:26
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vote up 56 vote down

Text input fields that force the user to input the data the way the computer stores it, not allowing for the way humans conceptualize or see the data.

Enter your credit card number. NO SPACES OR DASHES!

It takes, what, one line of PHP/Python/ASP code to strip out all the non-digits?

Related: The English-centric view that every person has exactly one first name and one last name.

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The English-centric view that dates have to be written like this: 06/19/2009. What's even worse, a lot of sites and applications give you no clues as to the correct date format. – alex Jun 19 at 13:16
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More specifically, it's an America-centric view. The English write that date as 19/6/2009. – Barry Brown Jun 19 at 17:02
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So does the rest of Europe (most of them, at least). – ldigas Jun 20 at 18:25
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I never understood the american point of view in putting the month, then the day (most often changing) and then the year (not changing that often). – ldigas Jun 20 at 18:25
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@Idigas: An american explained it to me as related to how they say days, "June 30th, 2009". Still, it's not a great reason. – Jeff Yates Jun 30 at 21:33
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vote up 53 vote down

Disabled menu items without any indication of why they are disabled. To some degree, all operating systems and applications suffer from this.

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Remember those old text-based adventures? They had byzantine puzzles: eg you can't open the dam gates until you go into the dam control room and press the yellow (not green) button and turn the bolt using the elven wrench from the temple..... I think of those games when I'm trying to get some &$*&^% disabled menu item enabled – Andrew Shepherd Jun 22 at 0:25
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Useless descriptions

I hate it when the name of some element in an application has the same value as its description, or something quite similar. E.g. a checkbox is called 'Special Whizbang' and its tooltip says only 'Toggle Special Whizbang'. This tells me nothing about what Special Whizbang is, or why I would want it on, or why it is perhaps off by default.

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The Delphi 2007 help file was exactly like that. It read like auto-generated boilerplates. (It probably was) – DR Jun 18 at 20:03
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Lotus Notes disclosure buttons pop up a tooltip saying "Twistie Icon", like it was important or informative, somehow. – Alex Brown Jun 19 at 0:04
vote up 46 vote down

Adding menu items under system menu of application. For example, right clicking on the task bar button on command prompt shows:

alt text

I have a habit of closing apps by right clicking on taskbar button and clicking close specially when I am closing many items. I always end up opening properties, when I try to close running command windows. Another example is the chm help files.

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This is so f***ing annoying! I wish there was a +100 option for this one! – Eyvind Jul 1 at 14:05
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@porneL: Except that the window icon location isn't as constant as the taskbar's. The icon can reasonably be anywhere in the screen making the first step of you solution "finding the icon". When right-clicking on the taskbar then choosing the bottom-most item (Then swearing at cmd, very important step), the position is much more limited and the whole process can be done in brainless mode. – Alex Brault Jul 21 at 0:58
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The Windows compiled help files are great for this. I have seen this About dialog about 1000 times... -.- – furtelwart Aug 5 at 8:50
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Suggestion: when does somebody come with the feature that we've known for years as the middle-click==close on tabs in browsers? Middle-click on an icon in the taskbar would make this rightclick>close annoyance go away. Should be standard feature in WinNext. – Abel Oct 22 at 14:42
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vote up 34 vote down

Having sites where you have to register (Amazon, social networks, email providers, Stack Overflow...) that requires you to fill in way more information that is really required, and worst of all, they have a password policy that makes you go @#$@%@#!@#!@#!@@#!@. what on earth is wrong with a simple lenient password for my account? It's not the bank!!!! I just want to register to post in some forum....

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The Problem is, you have to register and choose a password. Using OpenID, like StackOverflow does, is IMHO a much better choice. – Tim Büthe Jun 18 at 10:51
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The strict password policy probably is there to prevent spammers from taking over accounts. – J W Jun 19 at 9:34
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strict password policy is useful where it's needed, for example for my online bank account. when a strict policy is applied to an account I open just to post something in a forum, it's too much... – Ami Jun 19 at 10:22
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