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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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4  
@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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220 Answers

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Visual Studio's help system.

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F1... ZzzzzzzzZZZzzzzzzzzzz.... Zzzzz Oh finally its up. – Nick Bedford Sep 22 at 3:19
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Another case of the more bloated you get the harder you find to get it up? ;-) – Dan Diplo Oct 19 at 18:27
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Microsoft Query that handy little tool for getting real data into Excel. Doesn't look like its had a girlfriend since the 80s.

Shame it hangs when you have a large number of results and that there's no way to cancel a query running. It also doesn't like complex queries such as unions or stored procedure calls.

Query main view

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vote up 9 vote down

The worst UI I've ever used is not one found on a computer screen.

I hate the 'vocal' interfaces you get when you call a company (read: wireless companies and financial institutions) and they try to impress you with their voice activated menu systems that a. never gives you the options you need, b. can never quite understand everything you say and c. needs you to start banging numbers a couple of rounds, or swearing to get to a person to have a conversation and try to get exactly what I need.

If I wanted to do the simple stuff (e.g., check my balance, pay a bill) I would have done it online. I call because I have a specific problem that I need to solve, and every time, their voice menu system just throws me into loops of frustration.

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vBulliten. It is absolutely hideous (the default theme)

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Today I've met the:

Flash settings manager!!

That's the oddest settings manager I have ever seen.

It is ultra counter intuitive.

It took me about 10 minutes to realize: "That was not a picture"... and other 5 to figure out what to change.

Right click -> advanced:

alt text

Yes advanced please!

This strange page from adobe with a lot of text shows up. Usually I just quit at this point. With a strange feeling of What did I do wrong???

where to go from here

What did I do wrong?

Now, where to go from here?!!

Ok eventually and after reading and clicking all around, I came to this page ( well actually somebody drop me the directly to it )

And I did what I guess most users do when they get this far ( if they do ). I stare at the page wondering what to do next.

As I knew there was "something" there, I .. read .. :P

Oh THAT's not an image that's the actual setting manager. What is it doing in the Adobe site?

that's not an image

Oh that's not an image

Ok, changed something here.. now what? Should I save? mmmhh nope, just close the window? What? What?

I have to just close the window, the this was the strangest experience I have ever had.

It does against all the habituation's we have formed using computers.

Did you knew were the Flash players settings are?

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What the heck! I never realized there was actually an advanced dialog there! I thought it was only documentation! This must really be the worst GUI ever. Worse than Lotus Notes. – Konrad Rudolph Sep 1 at 14:49
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Cubase (the music sequencer from Steinberg) had one of the most confusing and overwhelming UI's I've ever encountered:

Cubase 3

And also, for sheer fugliness, IE7/8 must get a mention, too.

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I've got to say the interface to find servers and join games in the Battlefield series games. (Battlefield 2)

They should all be slapped.

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Anything made by SAP.

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My own in my latest project.

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The Logitech Harmony Software is to me the best UI ever (this software configures the Harmony remote, from logitech).

The first menu is quite ok (even if all the UI is an HTML page) alt text

But, then, if you want to configure something, it's a real nightmare. Instead of menus or buttons, you have some radio-buttons to select something to change/configure, and a 'next' button to to change what you select. And also a 'finish' button you can press even if your changes are not finish or valid. And a triple confirmation is asked... Very awful and unattractive. And all the menus are unusable like that... alt text

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vote up 1 vote down

VMware Infrastructure Client

It is slow! It doesn't work, and it breaks all the time.

Try to create a new VM. As it is being created, you can see it on the list of VMs. Now right click it and select Edit settings.

How can you edit settings on a machine being created? You can't. You get a freaking null reference exception!

And it has way more flaws than you could ever imagine.

VMware and the concept of virtualization is great. But the Infrastructure Client is the Worst UI I've Ever Used!

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Solomon IV Service Series was awful. No, that doesn't do it justice. Solomon was impressively F*#@-ed up.

I had almost forgotten the horror, but thanks to this thread my long-repressed memories have bubbled to the surface. So much for all that precious time and money spent on therapy and hypnotism!

We had to upgrade all of our systems to machines 2-3x as fast, with 4x as much RAM, just to run it. Even with the blazingly fast new workstations, Solomon still ran (er...crawled) slow. We commonly joked that the faster machines just allowed Solomon to crash faster and let us reboot more quickly. Sadly, it was only a joke for the first couple of days...after that, it was just a very disheartening statement of fact. Originally we were still running Windows 95--that had to go, too, because only an enterprise-class operating system like Windows NT 4.0 could handle Solomon's frequent crashes without requiring a reboot. Well...almost. We found out later that WinNT couldn't always handle the crashes, but at least we were sometimes able to save any other files we had open and semi-gracefully reboot the system.

In order to do anything, you had to memorize seemingly random patterns of buttons and menus to click on. There was no logic to the order in which you opened up new screens to enter new customer data, look up existing tickets, etc. There were several different ways to do do almost everything, but nobody could get the same series of steps to produce the same result (except for hanging the system--that feature was implemented particularly well).

To top it all off, Solomon Service Series was apparently built on top of a set of lobotomized VB libraries, which meant Solomon didn't "work" (if you can call it that) like any other Windows application any of us had ever used. The text fields' behavior sometimes wasn't even consistent within a single screen. A few cases in point:

  • Several text fields were stuck permanently in overwrite mode, so you had to copy & paste the contents of the field into Notepad, edit the contents, and copy & paste from Notepad back into Solomon.
  • Many text fields wouldn't allow you to copy or paste (including some of the fields that were permanently stuck in overwrite mode). You could neither right-click the mouse nor use Ctrl+C/Ctrl+V to copy/paste these fields.
  • Several fields were too short to insert meaningful messages.
  • The UI was an absolute maze.
  • Every dialog and screen had a numeric title which meant nothing to the user.
  • Buttons and menus had cryptic names, some of which did the opposite of what you would expect them to.
  • The program was astoundingly slow. Just tabbing to the next field would often bring the system to its knees. Imagine how much we dreaded actually clicking on buttons!
  • Solomon frequently (and sometimes nondeterministically) locked up the entire system, requiring us to reboot Windows or do a hard reset.

After several months of blood-boiling frustration due to system hangs and lost productivity, we discovered that you could sometimes interrupt a system hang and regain control of Windows. The on-site "Solomon Expert" from the third floor finally got tired of hearing us complain about the lock-ups and came down one day to demonstrate that the system worked perfectly for her.

I noticed that, as she zipped through the screens filling out a support ticket, something on the left side of the screen kept flickering on and disappearing, and she frequently reached all the way to the left of her keyboard to do something. Being the Windows 95 Power User that I was, it didn't take me long to catch onto what she was doing: she was pressing Ctrl+Esc, which is the keyboard shortcut for bringing up the Start Menu (none of our keyboards had "windows" keys, so I don't know if that would have also worked). As she continued demonstrating how great the system worked, I pointed out the Start Menu flicker to some of my colleages and we asked her, "Wait, what did you just do?" She showed us several more times as we tried to get her to notice that she was using an undocumented "feature" that nobody had ever told us about, but she didn't even realize she was pressing any extra keys until we told her to go one keystroke at a time and stopped her in her tracks when she reached for Ctrl+Esc. Somehow she had figured out a "hack" that allowed her to just barely trick this unusable software into working well enough for her.

In my free time, I started working on a replacement GUI app that would interface with the same database as Solomon, but which would actually "work," so to speak. My code-name for it was "DSD," for "Die, Solomon, Die." Unfortunately, I only had a copy of Visual Studio.NET Beta 1 to work with, and the GUI editor in Beta 1 really wasn't ready for prime-time. The time it took to refresh the GUI editor was apparently n!, where n was the number of components added to the Windows Form. On top of that, my tenure as a student was drawing to a close. I was about to get a new job, far, far away from Solomon, and nobody else really seemed to have the appropriate background or enough time and interest to pick up where I left off.

Oh, what we all would have given for a UI as sleek, robust, and user-friendly as FileMatrix.

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Microsoft Visual SourceSafe 6.0 , but may be because I'm using under Windows 2000/XP/Vista :S

Although I should say its UI is the least of my problems with VSS...

alt text

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mmm Windows 3 look and feel. MS Query is just as bad and that's still being distributed with Office. – pjp Aug 27 at 17:22
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That would be Notepad. Too many buttons. So Confusing. The help doesn't cover all the features.

alt text

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I know that you are being sarcastic, but I'd argue that Notepad has the cleanest GUI in any bundled Windows application. – voyager Sep 23 at 16:54
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It's Stack Overflow.

.

.

.

.

Just kiddin'. It's phpMyAdmin.

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MS Visio -.-

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vote up 5 vote down

Most of the posts here are UIs that are more complex than necessary, this is the opposite. Simplicity at the cost of utility.

It's incredibly complicated to actually accomplish anything with overly sensitive vertical scroll/clicking pad in the middle, along with the completely unpredictable buttons on the sides (I still don't know what the curved arrow with the dot button in the upper left does, all I know is you exit your current playlist when it gets clicked, which you can't get back to easily).

The touch pad in the middle that controls both scrolling and clicking is by far it's worst feature; it seems to have an shockingly accurate ability to sense which you're trying to do, and chooses to do the opposite.

Creating a playlist of more than a few songs is completely out of the question, as is diligently controlling the device in anything other than a completely stationary context (ie running or in a moving vehicle). If you click when you're supposed to scroll you can get anything from moving to a different screen unpredictably to exiting and losing a playlist you were in the middle of building.

Also if you plug into a computer and copy songs using the usb mass storage device feature you get an unpredicatble number of entries in your song list. I have some songs that are on my playlist as many as five times because of this.

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Stuttgart Neural Network Simulator (SNNS), the old Xaw gui was very painful (the new frontend based on Java is much better).

Besides the awful look and feel, widget layout, and the fact that you had to put the mouse over every single box to get the focus, there was one inputext to enter the name of the neural network file to load or save that couldn't handle more than a fistful of characters (I cannot remember how many exactly, but maybe less than fifty, wich is insufficient if you want to put a not very exaggerated absolute path).

main window another window

EasyCASE was a crappy CASE tool that I had to use at the University (and after a quick search in Google I think it was only used at the Spanish Universities, so lame). You can find a few shameful screenshots here; but the worst of all was that to drag a box you had to do a triple click over it to start and lock the drag and click again to release and drop it... I was lucky enough to discover it, but most of my fellows just kept clicking randomly a lot until it happened to work xD

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The Microsoft Certification Exam application - both the practice one you get with those Microsoft Press Training Kits and the real-deal one. Poor keyboard support, unresizable, seemingly overtly hostile towards scrolling in every way imaginable.

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I would say Oscommerce. The most ugly ecommerce template. alt text

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Windows windows that can't be resized and should be made resizable.

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Why this isn't made resizable is beyond me ...

alt text

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Ohhhhh yeah, that one sucks. Especially after you click Edit. I always end up copying the value to notepad, editing it, and copying it back. – jspru Jul 11 at 0:04
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to ease the pain: rapidee.com/en/about – utku_karatas Aug 5 at 12:44
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Yes, this drives me madddddddd! Especially when it shows a full path to something and you can't see what that is! – Dan Diplo Aug 18 at 12:48
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vote up 7 vote down

Windows Update's balloon notifications (from the Windows XP era). Every time I click a button it minimises to the system tray and pops up a notification. I click the notification to dismiss it and the dialog comes back. It's whack-a-mole hell.

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Cubase... it sucks after all these years, maybe it looked better on the Atari ST...

http://www.tweakheadz.com/images/cubase3.jpg

Cluttered, complicated and requires you to jump through many many hoops to achieve something simple.

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vote up 6 vote down

WOMS This is an awful MS Access powered database I had to use at a temp job. The only thing that kept me going was the pretty wallpaper I found when I was looking forward to getting Windows Vista.

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The left side start menu is also not nice :P – Macha Aug 18 at 13:21
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Craigslist. Do you really need a link for every single city, state, and country on the right? If I click Chicago, why do I need to see all that still? This web site should be one of those games where the person who guesses how many links are on the page wins a free trip to Disneyland or something.

alt text

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I think one of the things that make craigslist so popular it's its simplicity. Yes it's cluttered, but yes, it is simple. – Carlo Jul 10 at 23:41
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@Carlo, and free. Free can out-weigh many concerns/UI issues. – ricebowl Aug 18 at 13:09
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NDepend is a GREAT product, but the busy, scary UI totally freaks me out.

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A dialog I created. Fortunately it has long disappeared from our application :-)

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HummingBird's information mining tool, was it written by the same follows behind Remedy

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The text editor on an old Data General.

Client: "You ever used vi?"
Me: "Ugh...yes."
Client: "Well this is going to make Vi Look like Word."

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The Windows Environment Variable editor.

Textbox FAIL.

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I'd upvote it, if I hadn't mentioned it already. – ldigas Aug 27 at 18:21
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