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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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219 Answers

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Helix, an old mac (pre OS X) database. It was actually kind of an interesting product in that it tried to be a "create your own relational db" in a graphical form. Unfortunately, a definition of a table included an enormous list of graphical elements representing calculations, relations with other databases, indexes, fields, views of fields, screens defined on the table, ...

I'm sure it didn't help that I had to maintain an enormous app written in this, where a "table" might have a list of hundreds of elements, all helpfully mixed together into a giant and appetizing stew.

Here's a screenshot of the only piece of this I could find online - you'd glue a bunch of these together to make something called an "abacus", and you'd point it to a field to display a calculated value (the name getting cut off in the screenshot was a normal behavior, BTW). alt text

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Z-Brush, although a very powerful tool left me baffled and confused. I'm an experienced user of photoshop and 3d studio, but Z-brush really makes me aggressive.

Maybe I could get used to it. Anyone here who works with Z-Brush regularly and can tell me what you think after prolonged use?

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vote up 65 vote down

1-4a rename

1-4a rename

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heh. I love the checkbox "I am DJ McDonald's". Yay for obviousness :) – gnud Jan 12 at 11:01
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At least it's color coded... I guess? – Andrei Krotkov May 17 at 8:08
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A horrific UI, but a fantastic program. The non-resizable, 3 line folder view in the top left is priceless – Chris Driver Jul 10 at 10:40
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vote up 4 vote down

The search in Fogbugz. The version we use at work has a search box and has no advanced search page so if you don't know the query language for the box you're buggered.

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Oh come on...worst UI you've ever used? It's a search box. And it works. – Judah Himango Apr 4 at 17:53
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I used to work at a hardware store, and the retail management system we used was just AWFUL. It was written in FoxPro and had many delightful features:

  • Red text indicated that a text box was editable. Normal text meant it was not.
  • Text boxes were filled with spaces. When you clicked in a text box, the pointer would quickly snap back to the first non-space character. This also meant that typing was also handled by some hacktastic method. If you had the insert key on, you were screwed.
  • When searching (e.g. for a customer, an inventory item), you could only search by one column of the grid they used, and only for strings at the beginning of a word — no actual filtering.
  • The user interface "flashed" at a small size before it was redrawn at a higher resolution.
  • The previous was especially bad when sometimes two to three windows would pop up at a time before you were able to interact with it.
  • To get from one part of the application to another (e.g. from ringing sales to looking up an inventory item), you had to hit [esc] until you got to a completely blank screen. From there, you accessed the menu to get to where you wanted to go. The menus were inaccessible in normal system usage.
  • This is not a UI detail, but multiple retail stations were handled by having a network-mapped database file accessed by multiple clients.
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While this is stricly speaking a UI, it's not something I use, but it ranks right up there along the worst of UI design with the pros.

Warning Put on protective goggles before opening the following link:

http://www.arngren.no/

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Woah this is great... it even loads slowly enough to let you see it come to light in full glory slowly... I laughed so hard my wife complained I must not be working... – Christopher Mahan Jan 21 at 10:40
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This is a classic user-designed app. When I am doing hallway usability testing, by far the most common request is "can you make that more important? and that? and that?" Of course, if everything is important, then nothing is. So, those requests are always rejected. – Mark Brittingham Feb 9 at 0:04
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Wow. I thought this page was a brilliant technical achievement, until I cracked open the source and realised that it's all done with absolute-positioned divs. Amazing. – Dogmang Feb 25 at 0:18
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I love it. Looks just like those classified ads I used to see in some old American magazines my uncle used to treasure. – Agnel Kurian Mar 26 at 10:25
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I couldnt go thru all the posts (protecting my eyes), but Crystal Reports suck pretty bad!

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vote up 265 vote down

A form in an access application I 'Have' to maintain...

Awful

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You poor bastard. – WW Jan 12 at 10:10
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Holy mother of god... – Rob Feb 2 at 1:35
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Happy debugging! – labilbe Feb 2 at 3:33
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That is... that.. man, I got nothing. – Alarion Apr 10 at 17:49
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"It's full of tabs..." – Chrisb Jun 4 at 20:35
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The Realtek sound control panel. Because you obviously need an equalizer setting to 'sewer pipe', 'underwater', or 'cave'.

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System properties, if you right-click 'My Computer' on Windows PC

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Any particular reason? – Ted Percival Jul 10 at 23:08
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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 337 vote down

Myspace Layouts

Your average myspace layout is totally impossible to read, use and navigate.

alt text

I rest my case!

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reminds me of geocities – hasen j Jan 8 at 11:02
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A Dutch variant of these kind of sites (immensely popular in the Netherlands) is - to me at least - even worse: hyves.nl – peSHIr Jan 8 at 11:09
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Well, myspace users are the ones to blame. – Eduardo León Feb 24 at 18:42
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This is the site Firefox's [View->Page style->No style] was made for! – bobince Mar 1 at 12:09
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It's funny when you read about the guy: web dev & design, html, css myspace – Ctrl Alt D-1337 Mar 5 at 4:32
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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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Microsoft outlook. While I'm ok with the rest of the office suite this one just leaves me baffled. Why have email, calendar, tasks and whathaveyou combined in one application when there's no real integration between them? The search is ridiculously slow and "oh you wanted to search in other places than your inbox? well just click here and here and here".

I guess what it boils down to is combine the stress and burden of your emails with a subpar interface and you have the recipe for a really unpleasant experience.

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Must not be using Exchange. My email, calendar, tasks and whatnot are all pretty well integrated. – Michael Itzoe Feb 20 at 22:31
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You must not be an enterprise user. Email, calendar, and tasks are definitely integrated in the enterprise. – radesix May 8 at 9:40
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I have never seen a time tracking application with a good ui. (I'd be delighted to be proven wrong though)

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Havenworks

Havenworks image

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But it's so colourful! – dbr Jan 12 at 9:32
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This is what happens when fruit salads become angry. – tinkertim Mar 8 at 7:30
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@rally25rs - I never thought I'd say this, but don't insult MySpace pages like that. – Jason Baker Mar 16 at 22:48
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what IS that? i can't seem to find what that site's for, or what it means :S – Hugo May 17 at 8:04
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Is it possible this site is actually just a joke? – Nixuz May 25 at 8:33
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vote up 156 vote down

Not the worst ever but just to be original: Windows media player

alt text

Anybody still remembers that ugly head?

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There go 8 years trying to forget it down the drain! – Christopher Mahan Jan 21 at 10:42
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Every time I get close to WMP (not head, just regular one), I get completely confused. I fave no idea how that crap is intended to work – Slartibartfast Feb 20 at 2:08
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Wow, so cool man, he's got like music in his head or something. Rad! – 20th Century Boy May 25 at 7:38
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That's my head... – ThePower Aug 11 at 9:44
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The head is just an extreme example of why "skinning" is such a horrible concept. The only people worse than programmers at UI design are users. – MusiGenesis Aug 18 at 2:54
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alt text

I won't say what my companies app is called incase I get fired but it looks just like this.

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where's the tabbing? – Christopher Mahan Jan 21 at 10:37
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@Christopher Mahan - you have to scroll down to get to the tabbing. – Stephen Denne Jun 10 at 1:15
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The Powerbuilder IDE givis me the creeps.

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The godawful "Select Folder" dialogue on Windows XP and all its ilk (I do not know if it is in Vista).

Prepare to browse the entire structure of your disk through a tree view inside a small, non-resizeable window. And no, you can't just copy paste the full path to the directory you want because there's no text box to do so in.

It would be merely annoying if it wasn't used in every Windows application and installer ever.

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Yeah, the fact that it isn't resizeable is the killer in my book. – Greg D Jan 26 at 14:02
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I want to vote this up a thousand times. – Mark May 8 at 9:35
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I dislike gimps UI. For the sake of multiple top level windows, or windows in front of windows which have no taskbar entry. Hell no.

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PeopleSoft

our university forces us to use it, it sucks, I hate it!!!

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Standard Time - Its web interface is not intuitive at all.

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The Remedy UI can be very frustrating...

Remedy

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A majority of the Remedy screens I've seen are custom developed (like the one you posted above). You can't blame the product for what people do with it. Remedy is more of a platform. ArSystem out of the box isn't too bad at all. – asp316 Mar 4 at 15:55
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The tcsh shell.

It's vilely inconsistent and buggy.

As a small example, set/setenv/alias all use different notations for assigning variables (or aliases):

dbr% set something 'a'
set: Variable name must begin with a letter.
dbr% set something='a'
dbr% setenv something='a'
setenv: Syntax Error.
dbr% setenv something 'a'
dbr% alias something='a'
dbr% alias something 'a'

Even little things like the history is reformatted when you retrieve it..:

dbr% if(1) echo something;
something
dbr% if ( 1 ) echo something ;

There's much bigger issues I've run into at work (with an older version of tcsh we're basically stuck with), but the above transcript is from tcsh 6.14.00 (the most recent is 6.15)..

There are a lots of articles on it's buggyness, for example this one from 1996 or this, and quite a few of the bugs are still around in the very recent version shipped with OS X Leopard..

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vote up 1 vote down

I once worked for a company that had a web-based UI that had a transition page with a button containing the text 'Do not press this button' on it. Pressing the button caused it to grey itself out and display 'Do not press this button again'.

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Copyright Douglas Adams :) – ChrisF Mar 4 at 15:55
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Photoshop is an otherwise fine example of a good GUI imo, but they did get one thing horribly wrong: F12 which is "save as" in Office is Revert to last saved change in Photoshop - No questions asked and no undo!

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SUPER © "The Encoder" is a very useful app that needs a big UI overhaul!

Their website also needs an overhaul!

The horror!

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looks pretty tidy IMO – Hugo May 17 at 8:12
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It suffers from being a front-end for a command-line app. "Lots of small switches" works well for command-line apps, where anything you don't use, you don't need to worry about as it will take a reasonable default value. In a GUI front-end, mapping every switch to a control causes this sort of thing. – thomasrutter May 25 at 8:04
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Still i think its pretty clean – Quamis Aug 5 at 13:12
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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.

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vote up 32 vote down

Take this!. alt text

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