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What is the worst user interface you've ever had to use? One that made you want to somehow locate the creators over the internet, personally fly to their location, and then beat them severely with a large trout.

What made it so terrible? Was it too many screens, ill-marked buttons, or just really annoying dialog boxes showing up everywhere? Screenshots are a plus.

Related question: Best UI Ever

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@Alan Hensel : you are right. Except for Lotus Notes (for the mail client GUI aspect). You can not get used to it. And it does suck. Big time... – VonC Oct 26 '08 at 18:53
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+1 for most appropriate use of trout I've seen all day. – Ben Blank Feb 25 at 0:33
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Not quite a dupe, but related at least stackoverflow.com/questions/238177/… – Brandon May 28 at 15:40
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I wonder how long will this question will survive before it either has to be (a) closed or (b) renamed "Every UI You’ve Ever Used"? – tardate Sep 1 at 10:40
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This is VERY programing related. Every programmer should learn how to make usable interfaces. The best program ever written is nothing if nobody can use it. – The Disintegrator Sep 3 at 2:07
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215 Answers

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vote up 263 vote down

FileMatrix (an old multi-column file manager)

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Wow, that looks really powerful. – HS Oct 26 '08 at 17:05
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My eyes! The goggles do nothing! – Dinah Nov 14 '08 at 17:54
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Holy God on a pogo stick ... That's ... Wow. I've flushed things that were prettier and more usable. – John Rudy Nov 14 '08 at 19:13
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copy pasted from the Daily-WTF... – shoosh Jan 2 at 3:24
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My god .. ITS FULL OF STARS! – tinkertim Mar 8 at 7:19
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vote up 405 vote down

Lotus Notes.

Seriously.

alt text

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Notes makes my eyes bleed. They constantly say that users are wrong about how bad the UI is, they just need more training. If users need to be trained to send an e-mail, the problem is not the users. Oh, wait, we don't send email. We replicate memos. – Greg D Oct 30 '08 at 15:52
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...and press F5 to refresh... Ooops, nope, that logged you out. F9 is refresh. – Christopher Mahan Jan 21 at 10:34
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You said it. I even worked very briefly as a Lotus Notes instructor, and it will definitely make you bleed from your eye sockets. The UI has 4, count them, FOUR separate 'delete' buttons/menu items.... and they work in DIFFERENT ways!!!! EPIC FAIL! – Jens Roland Feb 6 at 18:29
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+1 for Notes-induced brain damage. My company is married to this horrific PoS. – sstock Feb 23 at 12:48
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Notes is a development platform that you can use for all sorts of stuff. The problem is, when you do, you can't actually hide the dev platform! So when an e-mail user wants a new message, they can't just hit ctrl-n, oh-no, that makes a new database! I hated notes when last I used it (2 jobs ago). I've seen worse, but still... – Michael Kohne Apr 29 at 19:17
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vote up 197 vote down

Gimp. Hands down. It's a pretty powerful editor, but its UI is pretty difficult. It may be pretty powerful once you learn it, but there are other image editors out there that are just as powerful and easier to learn (albeit cost money).

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Gimp is just exactly as easy to use as Photoshop. Which is to say, not at all. But if you're going to be stuck with a rubbish UI, you might as well not suffer the extra injury of having to pay money for the thing, I say... – bobince Oct 26 '08 at 23:51
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If you want to make Gimp seem easier to use, try Lotus Notes for a while! – Mitch Wheat Oct 27 '08 at 15:28
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GIMP is the perfect example of open source applications needing to enlist the help of UX professionals. Photoshop isn't easy to use by any means, but it's still light years ahead of GIMP. – Mark Hurd Feb 17 at 23:23
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I always thought GIMP looked like Photoshop exploded and no one knew how to put it back together. – benjismith Feb 20 at 23:25
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I've never really gotten the GIMP UI hate. It's not the best in the world, that's for sure, but it's not that bad. I never feel I'm fighting it, but I never feel like it's helping me either, if that makes sense. – Bernard Mar 12 at 11:00
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Telelogic Synergy is pretty bad. There is no consistency between pop-up dialogs... i.e. some have a 'Save' button and some don't and buttons aren't placed where you would expect from one dialog box to another.

It also remembers what you had selected on windows that are no longer open so if you tryto 'add selected' to a task you get some fairly random collection of objects.

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I'll second the vote for Lotus Notes, specifically 6.0. I had to use it at a customer site for a month. I can't erase it from my memory. Here are a few reasons why it's so awful:

  • Pressing the Esc key on the main window exits the application.
  • The button to send a new email says "New Memo."
  • There are very, very few keyboard shortcuts. Ctrl-N does not open a new email (er, memo). It does nothing.
  • Right-clicking a message does nothing. No context menu at all.
  • Need to set an out of office message? That's cool, but it's only going to send at 2 AM!
  • In just about every other email client, sender's addresses are the person's name (John Smith) or email address (john@smith.com). In Notes, it's John Smith/Detroit Office/Company Name. And you can't get an Internet email address out of that.
  • Forget about HTML emails.
  • Typing in your password alternates some strange glyphs with several X's for each character
  • To select multiple emails, you have to place a checkmark next to each mail, but there's no column guide for that. Just empty space.
  • The error messages were clearly written by non-English speaking engineers.
  • Attaching a file requires navigating menus and dialog boxes, instead of just dragging the file to the message.
  • Everything opens in a new tab. EVERYTHING.
  • It's ugly. Just plain ugly. The welcome screen is a hodgepodge of several different user functions with no guidance on what any of them do.

alt text

So, yeah. I hate Notes.

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Even I vote for your (much more detailed) post (and I posted the Lotus "worst GUI" first!) – VonC Oct 26 '08 at 21:08
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I do like the ability to use a double-right click to close the open tab though! Oh wait, no, that's stupid. – Greg D Nov 23 '08 at 18:25
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I wouldn't list "No HTML email" as a disadvantage. I fucken hate HTML mail. – Adriano Varoli Piazza Dec 5 '08 at 12:52
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My favorite: Hitting F5 does not refresh, or check for new mail. No, it locks the screen and requires your password to unlock it! – eJames May 5 at 16:29
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vote up 147 vote down

I've always thought the Microsoft Word Options dialog was an example of the shotgun approach to UI design. They just dumped everything into one place. Need to change your spelling dictionary? Options. Want to change the default behavior for Save? Options. Want to turn on macro security? Options. And so on.

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Sure beats trying to configure Linux in text mode. ;) – Karl Dec 5 '08 at 12:47
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Karl: yes, at least you can "grep -i option" in Word configs. No, wait... – Rytmis Dec 5 '08 at 13:35
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But at least, it comes down to the options UI. Most of it is usable, or at very least, consistent. – Mehrdad Jan 8 at 10:45
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+1 for reminding me of how much I hate how the tab positions are not static. If you click on one of the tabs in the top row, that row moves to the bottom of the tab bar! Ahhhhhh! – Mike Sickler Mar 4 at 16:07
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Would you prefer a dozen different options boxes? I think that would confuse the users even more. Personally I hate applications where I have to hunt down several different Preferences/Options/Settings dialogs so that I can set all the things I want. – Vilx- Mar 26 at 9:36
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vote up 5 vote down

The QSTAR optical jukebox interface is a nightmare. Nested tab controls, sometime 3 layers deep and each with an embedded combobox at the top that needs to be re-selected every time you change tabs. Icons that have little or noting to do with their purpose. No online help and lots of random buttons all over place inviting you to do things like "Clear Error Condition State" and "Apply PC" Yuck!

Qstar Interface

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vote up 57 vote down

Here is one from GNOME:

UI FAIL

All of Gnomes configuration dialog have no "Apply" or "Cancel" settings. Most Gnome applications don't have multilevel undo, so if you change 3 settings, there is no way to restore them.

Also noted that pressing close, escape or the control box save the changes.

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Instant-effect dialogue boxes aren't a bad thing at all; just one method of closing is better than working out whether you want OK, Set, Apply, Cancel, Save or Close. But yes, Undo certainly needs to be well-supported first. – bobince Oct 26 '08 at 23:54
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Undo seems to work fine for me in most of the Gnome apps; have you used it recently? I have to use an old version at work and it's excruciating right enough! I do think the instant-apply settings are good, although they take a little getting used to. – Calum Oct 27 '08 at 23:26
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I don't mind lack of OK/Apply buttons at all. OS X sticks to immediate changes everywhere. It doesn't have redundant Close buttons though :) – porneL Dec 6 '08 at 23:08
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Instant change is a good thing. – Bernard Mar 12 at 10:18
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porneL beat me to it, but OS X does the same thing. – supercheetah Mar 26 at 10:46
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In general, every program written with Xt library. They are a bunch of monochrome rectangles with idiotic (or non-existant) keyboard shortcuts. No other thing comes close.

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A close second: Anything written in Swing on windows. Fugly. – Will Oct 26 '08 at 21:11
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vote up 89 vote down

From Coding Horror, wGetGUI:

wGetGUI

EDIT: I didn't actually use this.

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OK, I love the "Pro Mode" at the bottom. I assume that shows even MORE options? – John Rudy Nov 14 '08 at 19:17
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I love the horizontal line that stabs right through the Hosts options. GNU and GUI are like polar opposites. – Soviut Dec 31 at 9:02
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Can you imagine what all of the code that handles those checkbox states looks like? – Ed Swangren Feb 20 at 22:49
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This is an argument for the command line. – Joshua May 17 at 19:33
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This is like what a command-line tool would be like if it were designed as a GUI tool. There are several other examples of this kind of thing, like front-ends to video converters. The "tons of little switches" approach works so much better on the command line, where anything you don't type, you don't need to worry about. – thomasrutter May 25 at 7:46
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vote up 10 vote down

Most of the SQL management tools - Enterprise manager, OEM of Oracle, SQL Plus are all painful.

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EM isn't that bad, imho. However, I felt the 2000 version was easier to use for noobs than the current one. – Will Oct 26 '08 at 21:05
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The 2008 version of SSMS is much improved... – Mitch Wheat Oct 27 '08 at 15:25
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phpMyAdmin's is pretty bad, but you get used to it. – Charlie Somerville May 25 at 7:27
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That's why I use 'psql'. ;) – jwp Jul 10 at 23:24
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vote up 2 vote down

A long time ago Oracle had an application similar to Microsoft's query analyzer where you could type in pl/sql - but the window where you entered code was about 8 characters wide by 10 characters long (OK I am sure I am exaggerating a bit). You could never see more than a tiny fraction of what you were coding. There was no way to increase the size of that little window.

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vote up 199 vote down

Blender, the 3D software, has always maddened me; it's extraordinarily powerful, and a truly amazing piece of code, but the interface is made of tiny buttons with nonsensical icons, "tabs" nested several deep in places, and nothing -remotely- resembling a clear path from one part of your workflow to another. It's also usually hard to tell which of the many, many, many interface panels a given button belongs to; some of them even have their own menu bars. alt text

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I think the guy in the picture just found out that at his new job he'd be using Lotus Notes... – Mitch Wheat Oct 27 '08 at 15:24
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It's worth noting that many of the UI panels shown there are collapseable, so you can just deal with the portion of the scene you need to at any given time. – Factor Mystic Oct 27 '08 at 23:22
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A wise man once said "Blender's learning curve resembles a wall, followed by a mountain" – Firas Oct 31 '08 at 14:14
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Blender is hard to learn. But once you get a feel for it you start to wonder why other pgms don't work the same way. – Slapout Mar 30 at 15:30
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Blender is complicated - that doesn't mean the UI is bad. The flight deck of a 747 is complicated, it does a lot - how else are you going to do it? – mgb Apr 21 at 17:46
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vote up 48 vote down

Perhaps not as bad as FileMatrix, but a few years ago I was "fortunate" enough to try out a tool call Cybrid.

Cybrid was VB6 application that built 3d levels for a proprietary game engine.

Despite rarely using it, I still have Cybrid installed. Here's a screenshot of this 4-window app. This is the application in its default state when you launch it:

cybrid screenshot

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Leaving the default VB icon on the main window is inexcusable. You go to all the effort to build all of those options, then just can't quite find that last little bit of energy to fix that icon... But I guess that's the least of this program's visual problems. – JeffK Feb 13 at 1:48
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There are a ton of completely unlabeled controls in that one window, including four checkboxes that are checked for some reason. – Sid Farkus Mar 5 at 6:03
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A typical security camera software looks like this as well. – Hugo May 17 at 8:02
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All VB applications are typically horrible – Brock Woolf Jul 10 at 11:02
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vote up 15 vote down

The IM software Miranda. Try opening up their configuration dialog. It is absolutely hopeless to find even simple things like highlighting or auto-joining IRC rooms.

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Noooo Miranda options dialog rocks... ! ^^ – Oskar Duveborn Feb 18 at 23:34
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Miranda is a nice software – Albert Feb 28 at 15:41
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vote up 37 vote down

Facebook is currently my top worst interface.

The toolbars, tabs and widgets are a mess and the various "dialogs" that require input are hard to distinguish from ads.

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I think it's progressively getting worse? – cottsak May 12 at 6:54
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The worst part of facebook is the "applications". – jwp Jul 10 at 23:22
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I think Facebook's UI is pretty good, but then I only became a user after they started the streaming-update front page. One thing I do dislike is that it's very hard to understand who will see a given update: All your friends? All of someone else's friends? Only the person you're talking to? The Wall is the worst in this regard. Whenever you're posting something on Facebook, there needs to be a little box on the side that says very clearly things like [Only Bob Smith will see this] or [All of Bob Smith's friends will see this] or [All of your friends will see this]. – Kyralessa Jul 10 at 23:52
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If you have to say "better than MySpace", you've already ruined your point. – eyelidlessness Jul 25 at 20:22
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vote up 28 vote down

I once provided front-line support for an application that presented the user with a menu of options. It looked something like this:

[1] Do something

[2] Do something else

[3] Do another thing

[X] Exit

At this menu, my users were required to press "8".

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Photoshop, completely confusing, and requires training. I guess that is how they can justify what they charge for it. Preview does almost the same thing as Acrobat and it's free!

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photoshop becomes second nature after a while, I could almost hide everything and still use it fine. However for a beginner it is a bit much all those 4 letter combos. – corymathews Dec 5 '08 at 13:28
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Photoshop is widely known for its good UI. That's something you can't say about its so called "competitior" - the GIMP. – shoosh Jan 2 at 3:32
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Photoshops interface is brilliant. It's not an application that needs to be immediately easy to use - it does what it needs to (for it's target users) perfectly! – dbr Jan 12 at 8:56
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How does Preview as an alternative to Acrobat have anything to do with the Photoshop UI? Sounds like a random Adobe-hater to me. – Jenn D. Feb 18 at 22:37
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Photoshop is a poor solution to a problem without any good solutions. I personally think its UI is terrible, particularly in CS4, but the lack of any better alternatives does give me pause before condemning it completely. With that said, Adobe does have major UI problems in general, again especially with CS4. – eyelidlessness Jul 25 at 21:43
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vote up 9 vote down

+1 vote for Lotus Notes - absolutely horrible.

MS office is an ok UI, but I have to complain about when they change the location of functionality and features from release to release. AIIIRRGGGH!

Most web UIs also stink.

Serena PVCS for web is another "winner"

sorry, no time now for screenshots or descriptions

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vote up 1 vote down

I'd say the Control Data NOS text editor. Combine an interface that makes teco look straightforward with not quite achieving the expressive power of notepad.

Search for a string? Sorry, you have to rewind the file first. Yes, those are separate commands.

In OSes that had, say, somewhat more market penetration than NOS, I'll go with DEC's VMS text editor. Not bad if you were on a DEC terminal, but miserable if you had another vendor's TTY hooked up.

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I'm definitely going to second the vote for Blender. I have never been able to figure out quite how to use it (though that could be partly because I'm rather inexperienced with 3D modeling).

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I must agree with blender, It's what I learned on. But trying to go back to it after using 3DS Max for a while is impossible. Everything is buried under so many tabs.

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vote up 294 vote down

Generally all driver/hardware UIs, especially software that comes with motherboards, but also seen with sound cards and input devices.

alt text

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+1 including MSI utilities – Hugo May 17 at 7:55
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Why is it that all driver utilities have to use their own unique UI instead of the system chrome? And why do they always try to look like a futuristic aeroplane control panel? – DisgruntledGoat Jun 20 at 1:33
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Holy preset photoshop layer styles, batman! – Sneakyness Jul 25 at 18:21
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vote up 2 vote down

I'd say Windows Explorer. That "user-friendly" interface with nice shortcuts turns an average computer newbie into a completely clueless idiot after a couple of years. Re-educating somebody who clicks without reading and thinking first is very hard, because this becomes a rock-solid habit and affects the way one thinks.

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That's not an indicator of a bad GUI. In fact, quite the opposite. The GUI is so simplistic that even the most uneducated computer newbie can master it in a short time. That you find most users forget the more complicated methods after using it is a testament to its usefulness, not harm. – Chris Dec 5 '08 at 14:18
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it makes thing seem simpler than they are. people will refuse to see "the light" because they're blinded by the very simplistic gui that they think it's all there is to it. they become resistant to learning more. – hasen j Mar 30 at 13:16
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Just about anything done with Remedy/ARS.

Why?

Because these applications are in the worst place: Created by DB-engineers according to business process managers. Neither of which will ever be forced to actually use the system themselves.

(You can find Remedy on the forth place of Dreckstool, a german I-Hate-This-Software-Hitlist.)

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vote up 41 vote down

Interface hall of shame has a rich collection for your delight.

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The Interface Hall of Shame is a self-entry. – spoulson Feb 24 at 12:56
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vote up 8 vote down

An Excel "Project management" template seems to have triggered some emotions in this SO answer ;)

Pipetalk Scheduler:

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vote up 1 vote down

Countless websites with forms for entering addresses while the input text field has a max limit of 10 characters.

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vote up 17 vote down

I would add any interface that tries to draw its own non-rectangular background window, that is, where it has rounded/curved corners in an attempt to look "cool". JarretV has an excellent example posted above. I have yet to see a single app like that that wasn't awful.

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vote up 0 vote down

The Report Editor in Microsoft Access.

Nowhere near Lotus Notes, but to this day, I still absolutely hate Visual Basic only for the reason that it reminds me of building Forms and Reports in Access, even though it's not VB's fault

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And yet, it's still better than using using Crystal Reports. Believe me, I moved a VB6 application's reporting from calling out to Access Runtime Edition to using Crystal for a former employer and it was a downgrade in experience for me and the end-users. – U62 Jan 23 at 17:13
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I find the Access report editor the best. Tell me if there is any better reporting engine and I shall pay money to buy it. – CDR Feb 25 at 0:58
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