Allen-Bradley's ControlView. It was one of the first SCADA's, built onto an MS-DOS based, so-called-real-time kernel which pre-empted threads every 500 milliseconds. It featured EGA (640x350, 16-color) graphics when 800x600 SuperVGA's were becoming mainstream, Microsoft-only mouse support when even Microsoft supported Mouse Systems Mouse emulation, it had to be installed in a C:\ACCESS directory whose name was pretty much hard-wired all over and which contained all sorts of obscure sub-directories with three-letter names... but the real PITA was its graphics editor, called "Mouse Graphix". It had a built-in mouse driver clearly written for a 5-dpi-or-so mouse, so a very firm hand was a must, otherwise you were almost sure of selecting the wrong menu item; needless to say, next to one of the most used items there was the infamous "Clear All", whose confirmation dialog box was absolutely the worst piece of UI ever conceived. It went like this:
Cancel this operation? (Changes will be lost)
YES NO
"Obviously" you had to answer NO to confirm and YES to cancel.
"Obviously" changes would be lost if you answered NO.
"Obviously" there was no Undo. Oh wait, there was an Undo feature, but you had the option of disabling it altogether and we usually did, because it slowed down things to the point where every single operation would cost you 30 seconds of waiting for the hard disk to apparently grind coffee.
To make things even worse, Mouse Graphix automatically moved the mouse pointer to the default button every time it displayed a dialog box, just as Windows can do, but with no option to avoid it. And, its built-in mouse driver had no hysteresis applied to the button states, so any less-than-heavy click could easily turn into two or three click events... need I really tell you which was the default answer to the dialog above?
Other parts of ControlView were not so bad (I just loved its real-time database and PLC communication features, for instance) but Mouse Graphix, man, I've had nightmares about it for years.