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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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219 Answers

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vote up 35 vote down

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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vote up 33 vote down

Any web page with highlighted words that you mouse-over and a popup wants to redirect you. Most of the time the highlighted words have no relevance whatsoever to the story you are reading or are redirects to advertising.

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i would upvote this ten times if i could – Kris May 28 at 16:14
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almost every browser handles these terribly, since they're usually image-heavy. my computer slows to a crawl every time i accidentally hover over one. using a page with one of these is like playing a bad version of minesweeper. – A. Scagnelli May 28 at 16:33
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vote up 32 vote down

Take this!. alt text

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vote up 31 vote down

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.

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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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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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vote up 27 vote down

alt text

link text

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I always thought Lotus Notes' password entry was particularly clever. The changing icon is like a hash that gives you enough information to tell if you mistyped your password, but not enough for a shoulder surfer to recover it. – Paul Feb 25 at 2:50
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from that website..."This is not the login window for a weapons targeting system; it is an e-mail application. We wish the designers had spent their time improving the usability of the application itself rather than wasting it on useless diversions." lol...but, yes it is quite ingenius :) – dotjoe Mar 25 at 20:28
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@Paul: I've read somewhere that the icons can actually give you a significant amount of information about a password if you're shoulder-surfing and can remember them. It's enough to make brute-forcing a reasonably secure password quite feasible. – Doug Mar 26 at 11:10
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Um. Couldn't you just as easily find out if you'd typed your password correctly by hitting return? And if it doesn't let you in, you retype it more carefully? This icon-hash thing seems like more trouble than it's worth. – Beska Jun 19 at 18:34
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vote up 27 vote down

Unhelpful dialogue boxes:

Ok! Ok!

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vote up 26 vote down

Forms that clear all the inputs when there was a minor validation problem in one of them

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vote up 26 vote down

At the risk of being stoned to death ..

Emacs and Vim!

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Stone in hand.... – ojblass May 2 at 9:00
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Vim user interface can't suck, because Vim doesn't have user interface. – zeroDivisible Jul 10 at 10:38
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@zero, yes it does. a UI doesn't have to be graphical. plus, gVim also has a crappy interface. Though by now, vim has become my main text editor :D – hasen j Jul 10 at 20:25
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vote up 25 vote down

Courtesy of The Onion News Network, here's Sony's "Stupid box thing":

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"Anyone mystified by the product can use the device's numerous extraneous features and scroll through the interactive help menu, a labyrinth-y maze of indecipherable topics of use to fucking no one."

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I love the onion. – Pim Jager May 25 at 8:52
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vote up 25 vote down

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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vote up 24 vote down

I couldnt go thru all the posts (protecting my eyes), but Crystal Reports suck pretty bad!

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vote up 24 vote down

The UI in Visual Studio for remapping keys. The area showing commands available is not resizable, and is just high enough to show 3-4 of hundreds of commands available, rendering it impractical for scrolling through the list of commands, either to find the name Microsoft has given a command, so you can learn/remap the shortcut (is it Up? MoveUp? UpArrow?, no LineUp), or just to see if you can find some neat, useful shortcuts. The filtering mechanism is only minimally useful, so even if you know you're looking for an Edit command, you still have to scroll (and scroll, and scroll) through all those Edit.EmacsXXX and Edit.BriefYYY commands, even if you're not using those schemes. And until you've been through the list more than a few times, you don't know you're looking for an Edit command, and not a Format or Action command. There's no handy way to determine what keystrokes are not currently mapped, so if you're looking for a free keystroke you can assign to an unmapped command, it's try-this-now-that until you stumble across something that's both unused and vaguely mnemonic. It's a functionally complete UI that works well if you know exactly the name of the command and your current key mappings, and is difficult to use otherwise...which I think is probably the majority of cases.alt text

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At least you have a search box. – gix Jun 19 at 18:09
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If I had a nickel for every non-resizable dialog Microsoft has ever created, I'd be richer than Bill Gates. – Kyralessa Jul 10 at 23:55
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vote up 23 vote down

Microsoft Outlook - Options Dialogs

The options configuration in Outlook are a good runner-up, though they do not hold a candle to the paragon of user-abuse that is Lotus notes, of course.

It's a nesting doll of dialogs to a sometimes unbelievable depth.

Here's a basic example, it reads left to right, top to bottom (like a book). The only dialog you can interact with is the lower-most, right-most one since they're all modal. And of course you can't interact with the application itself since the very first dialog is modal.

Options dialog Russian nesting doll

I believe I've been as deep as 11 dialogs. But by that point I think I was changing my domain password. Yes, you can change you windows domain password from about 10 or 11 dialogs deep in Microsoft Outlook 2003.

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vote up 22 vote down

The Realtek sound control panel. Because you obviously need an equalizer setting to 'sewer pipe', 'underwater', or 'cave'.

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vote up 21 vote down

Any SAP UI ruined my day. Large parts of it are transactional which means you'll run across some weird behaviour and will type everything 3 or 4 times.

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vote up 21 vote down

EFTPS.gov: They have these long complicated tax forms, with helpful looking little ? boxes next to some of the fields. I got 2/3 of the way down one of the forms and wanted more info. I thought, "no... they wouldn't do that to me, right?", so I clicked the question mark. It took me to another page and cleared my original form. (Clicking "back" took me to the blank form)

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gotta middle click those :) – dotjoe May 28 at 15:44
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vote up 20 vote down

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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Disabling right-click on a web page. Especially when coupled with a javascript alert to tell you it's been disabled.

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And often it's to protect the 'source code' of the page. It's 2009, I'll see it if I want to - even if I have to dump the HTTP packets. – paulbeesley Jun 1 at 19:04
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vote up 19 vote down

kdevelop

EDIT:

FAR MORE WORST!!! REALLY HATE THIS!!!

IE

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kdevelop is really weird. I prefer raw kate + make over kdevelop. – hydroes Jan 8 at 10:41
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Please can you split this into the normal one-answer-per-reply format? I want to vote for the IE settings dialog but not for kdevelop. – user9876 Mar 4 at 16:07
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man that IE thing is terrible, have they heard of check-boxes? – Shraptnel Mar 12 at 10:26
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+1 on the IE thing although no-one that actually CONFIGURES the software they use, use IE. – Hugo May 17 at 8:12
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alt text

Believe it or not, this is Access 2.0 and it's still in production. The screen shows request for credit card. This windows application is currently in process of replacement with web application.

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I don't see why is this such a bad interface. I mean, it clear, concise and generally has everything on one screen. Zagrebacka banka ? – ldigas Jul 10 at 23:28
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vote up 19 vote down
  1. Automatically putting focus on the "user-name" field of a login form. I can't tell you how many times I entered part of my password in the "user-name" field just because I didn't want to wait for the page to finish loading.

  2. Flash websites. They're slow, annoying with all the animation, and you can't right-click / "open in new tab" the hyperlinks.

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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 17 vote down

I think tab index

when it's not set properly, using the software can be a pain

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Super converter. The application is really useful, but just look at this...

Main window:

SUPER main window

Context menu:

SUPER context menu

And you really don't wanna see the "skins" that come with it....

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+1 on the popup menu the windows actually seems quite tidy – Hugo May 17 at 8:13
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Heheh.. "show useful hints"? Nah, I prefer useless hints. – Wouter van Nifterick Jun 18 at 22:12
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Heh, yeah I've use this thing too but the UI is sooooo bad. – Simon H. Jun 19 at 18:33
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Why would you need to skin an app like this?! All I can say is thank God for Avidemux on Linux! When you first start Avidemux it looks a little cluttered, but as soon as you open a video file everything is really intuitive. – DisgruntledGoat Jun 20 at 2:05
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vote up 16 vote down

It's a website, not an app - but it is foul! You have to visit the actual site to see all the animated loveliness.

http://www.lingscars.com/

I suspect it's deliberate though (at least I hope so), and I even suggest there is quite a bit of skill that has gone into making it this bad.

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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 15 vote down

Oh God, Cadence Allegro, hands down. Easily the most painful software I've ever had the unfortunate necessity of using in my entire life.

It was routine to go through roughly 30-45 minutes of options-setting and configuration screens on a new project. I can't believe it's an industry-standard product.

A relatively tame screenshot of Allegro:

Cadence Allegro

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It makes for great job security. :P – Bob Somers Jun 19 at 4:35
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Photoshop is also an industry standard. Quality of UI doesn't appear to be considered a factor when these things take over. – Macha Aug 18 at 13:15
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Sadly, this is from the Windows installer of one of my favourite OSS projects. Thank God they removed this in a later version.

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Btw, Hitting Ctrl+C on such a dialog box will copy the whole text in the clipboard – Brann Sep 29 at 9:57
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That's extremely useful. I never knew! – Kev Sep 29 at 15:39
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PostgreSQL installer FTW – ykaganovich Oct 30 at 23:44
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vote up 14 vote down

Crystal Reports

I haven't used it in a few years, so hopefully it's improved since.

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Having to use CR XI daily, I can tell you it still sucks very badly! – dotjoe Mar 28 at 1:32
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