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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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vote up 1 vote down

Intel VTune!

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vote up 12 vote down

phpMyAdmin is increadibly bad in the terms of user interface.

I am especially frustrated with new version where developers decided to switch functionality of table selector.

There always was the name of table which led to structure of table and tiny unclickable icon that led to data of table. It was bad, but when you got used to it, it could be used. Now they switched it and as we manage more servers with different version it is always trial and error to get to where you want to.

Many more bugs and anti-features plague this product, but I am afraid that there is nothing better to be used.

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So true about the table name links. I've just started using SQL Buddy which isn't quite as full-featured but the interface is a dream! – DisgruntledGoat Jun 20 at 1:59
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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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3  
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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One more: Microsoft Project. And for the ultra-hardcore fans out here: Microsoft Project Professional with Project Server 2007.

I think it's the Lotus Notes of Project Management Software.

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vote up 158 vote down

iTunes for Windows

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iTunes in general. – Oskar Duveborn Feb 18 at 23:40
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Got to agree. On my mac I love iTunes, on Windows.... not so much. – Isaac Waller Feb 20 at 4:16
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I consider iTunes a virus - if I find it installed on any computers, I format the computer. – cbp Feb 23 at 23:03
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Never having used a Mac seriously since this 128/521K days, stuff like iTunes is what puts me off Apple. If iTunes is the best they can manage then I'm staying clear. – Lunatik Mar 20 at 8:04
31  
I use iTunes on Windows...what's wrong with it? It's simple... On the left is your full library and your playlists, on the right is your songs. Optional browser for artists and albums... I don't see how it's a horrible UI. – Carson Myers May 30 at 8:07
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vote up 9 vote down

phpMyAdmin is pretty bad.

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phpMyAdmin is simultaneously terrible and not so bad. I don't really know how they accomplished that. – eyelidlessness Jul 25 at 20:37
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vote up 9 vote down

I'm going with any Mac OS prior to OSX. Everything was the same color.

Or iTunes.

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What's wrong with having a consistent color scheme? I think the classic Mac look was clean and simple. – Amuck Sep 3 at 17:01
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vote up 16 vote down

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 4 vote down

SketchPath

I wrote this XPath Tool and agree with much of the first 'nomination' comments (though 'despise' was a bit strong - it illustrates well just how emotive UIs can be). Various aspects of the UI are unconventional (some even experimental) and therefore unintuitive. Also, guilty as charged for not hiding more controls from the 'average user' - quite a lot is hidden already - but I could have done more.

This product was written to fill a gap, which it hopefully does, but further work is scheduled to improve the UI.

SketchPath Screenshot.

Screenshot of SketchPath

[Update] Seen below is a 'worst-case' for the SketchPath successor. This deals with 10,000 files instead of 1, but hopefully learns lessons from earlier criticism of the UI? (Vertical panels inspired by TweetDeck)

alt text

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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."

alt text

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I love the onion. – Pim Jager May 25 at 8:52
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vote up 160 vote down

I'm surprised nobody's mentioned Bugzilla yet. Classic example of a "powerful" interface -- and absolute power corrupts absolutely....

Screenshot of Bugzilla's search interface

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20  
Finally someone willing to admit this... – Uri Mar 5 at 5:57
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I purposefully do NOT report bugs to any company who uses this software. I have tried and I always bail out halfway through the process. – Alarion Apr 10 at 17:51
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You've got to admit though that you're looking at the "Advanced" search page there. The regular search is just a single box and submit button, so lots of people will never see or need to worry about the extra options. – thomasrutter May 25 at 7:49
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Vista & Office 2007 - moving the location of learned functionality of previous iterations for the sake of calling it improved is not only subjective but maddening

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and that friggin Ribbon! – asp316 Mar 4 at 15:57
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I actually love the ribbon – hasen j Mar 5 at 5:37
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Uhm, the Ribbon is the best UI improvement ever. Read up on it, it's made in that way that mouse movement is mimimal and most-used things are easier to find, while least-used things are still easily accessible. Ever pressed ALT in Office 2007? No need to remember shortcuts. ;-) – TomWij Mar 26 at 9:48
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Besides that, you shouldn't buy new software if you don't want new improved things. ;-) – TomWij Mar 26 at 10:00
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@TomWij: I didn't buy it, it was forced on me at my job by some organizational honcho many levels above me. I'm sure the same is true for many people. – PTBNL Aug 27 at 18:15
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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 180 vote down

I have mixed feelings about this one, but I have to say Eclipse!

  • The first time I use it, I just couldn't do ANYTHING at all.

  • You really need the reference for this one.

  • My editing window become 5x5 text area all the time.

  • Is not intuitive at all.

The only way I managed to work productively with that is when I was part of a team where everyone else had several flying hours using it ( I was forced to use it ). I usually asked something like:

"How do I .... in eclipse"

And the answer always was:

"ohhhh very easy you just .... and then ... and then .... and finally ... quite poweful isn't ?

Without a mentor ( somebody who really loves the IDE ) I cannot get something done in eclipse.

For instance I didn't knew that Ctrl-M expands the current view ( so I can get my 5x5 editing area sane again ) That shorcut is just NOT discoverable at all, until someone from the SO community told me that my life with eclipse was miserable.

I know the screenshot belongs to swtswing project, but pretty much illustrates the point

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Glad to see I'm not the only one who feels this way... – Nik Reiman Feb 24 at 12:51
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yeah, eclipse is a PIA for new users. – StingyJack Feb 24 at 13:02
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@smartj: Of course!!! an extra monitor... geee, WHY I didn't thought about that!!!! The solution for bad interface design. Except that... Wait I minute, I use a laptop!. Oh I guess I just have to figure out how to carry the extra monitor in my bagpack. – Oscar Reyes Feb 25 at 18:12
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c'mon you had to open all those windows like that. That ain't the default. I could do the same with VS. – dotjoe Mar 28 at 1:27
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it's hard to get started in, but once you get familiar, you can say it's pretty well designed – Hugo May 17 at 8:01
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vote up 3 vote down

I vote for the old ZoneAlarm interface. it was awful. Fortunately the latest update really cleaned it up, but I don't have a screenshot any more...

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vote up 4 vote down

I'd have to say GroupWise client. It's obvious it wants to be Outlook, but can't quite cut it. Display settings are often lost and have to be reset. Most options are not found in the Option dialog. Just tweaking the UI is a pain. If I want to rearrange my folders, is it in the View menu? No. View | Folder List? No. Maybe Actions? No. Window? Tools? Tools | Options? No, no and nope. Try the Edit menu. Wha??? Totally unintuitive.

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vote up 8 vote down

I just saw an IP phone software yesterday that a friend wrote. The UI looks fine - looks like a cell phone - but behaves in a most unusual and surprising manner. Right clicking on it brings up the options dialog (ok that's kinda acceptable if there's nothing else to be put on the context menu) but if you double click it...the application exits. Most applications on Windows maximizes on double clicking and those that use a different look than the default Windows look (or don't want to be maximized) disable the double click, but it was most shocking to see a Windows application exiting upon double clicking (to be honest, not even linux or mac applications do that). He said their UI designer had said he wanted to give users "a new experience". One might as well hire a monkey as a UI designer then.

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I don't think screaming "what the hell just happened?" at their computer is "a new experience" for most people :) – Jim OHalloran Feb 25 at 1:46
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vote up 5 vote down

GPG. So unbelievably usability-free.

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vote up 218 vote down

MSDN

I find the MSDN (online) navigation slow and a tedious way of putting together about 100 books.

MSDN

Would you find a book like this in a library? 9 different categories before you reach the chapter you're after. Obviously most people just use the search or site:msdn.microsoft.com on google

Update

MSDN now has a low bandwidth version which is a lot nicer to use

Search Bookmarklet

It's a bit off topic but this is Google search bookmarklet for MSDN (make a new bookmark, copy this in as the url)

javascript:q=""+(window.getSelection?window.getSelection():document.getSelection?document.getSelection():document.selection.createRange().text);if(!q)q=prompt("Search terms [leave selection and box blank to list all pages] ...").replace(/\s\+/g,"%252B");if(q!=null)location="http://www.google.com/search?q="+q.replace(/\s+/g,"+")+"+site:msdn.microsoft.com";void(0);
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More like 1000 books. But yes, MSDN is one of the best, well put together set of documentation out there, but it's impossible to navigate without using Google to go directly to the article you want (and somehow they've made it worse in the latest version). – David Feb 24 at 13:19
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MSDN is easy to navigate... thank's to Google! :P – Cshift3iLike Mar 1 at 12:56
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vote up 2 vote down

http://www.perlmonks.org/

perlmonks.org

This was one of the first sites I was directed to when I started learning Perl. Though the underlying sytem is quite similar to another site that I am a regular user of, the strange layout and plethora of links at the very top of the page was downright repulsive. I still grimace whenever I visit the site but the content is simply outstanding (though a bit hard to reach at times). All this from a site that has the line "Keep It Simple, Stupid" at the page start.

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vote up 5 vote down

Definitely SAP R/3.

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vote up 1 vote down

Vodafone Mobile Connect Lite

Most of the UI is acceptable at best.

Points of particular annoyance:

  1. Gratuitous use of notification balloons which sometimes screw up and take ages to fade out
  2. Usage metere is dependent on which USB port the device is plugged into
  3. The app was written in VB 6 and looks the part
  4. With older device firmware the device is not usable through windows RAS UI making the application unavoidable
  5. The aforementioned older firmware must be updated on a windows xp box, attempting to do so on vista results in a bricked device as one might expect
  6. The session timer will not excedd 9:59:59. I'm not sure if this applies to the current session data metre but it wouldn't surprise me

Also why hasn't anyone mentioned Comunity Server yet

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vote up 4 vote down

I'll be impressed if I get any votes for this, but I suspect that most people out there that have tried this product would agree...

Campaign Cartographer, by ProFantasy.

This is a piece of mapping software, where you can draw landmasses, drop on some widgets like cities or mountains, etc. This sounds very straightforward, but trying to do darn near anything in this product is incredibly difficult.

To erase an item, for example, you would think you would click on the item, and then press delete or backspace or something like that. Not so.

Instead, you must first find the erase button, among the many mysterious buttons that line up around every side of the app window. You click that, then you must draw a box around the item you want to delete. Then you must right-click elsewhere on the page, and select "Do It" from the pop-up menu.

It only gets worse from there.

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vote up 1 vote down

Maybe not so bad compared to some others, but I always shudder in fear when i have to use Super (c) video converter alt text

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third time somebody posts this.. I'm not going to vote this up the third time – Wouter van Nifterick Jun 18 at 22:22
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AIM Messenger....

Why? Everytime see someone use it and regardless of the platform they're on...

It's hideous!

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All of the default apps on Windows Mobile. Phone is just could not be used as such without third-party replacements. They look ugly and they can't do they job at all.

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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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vote up 3 vote down

I would have to say Word 2007 for Windows, at least on first use. I upgrade from 2003, and bam!: "Where the hell did my icons and menu bar go?". And why is there a freaking start menu?

Thank god that this corruption never hit the Mac version.

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I agree, the new UI ends up taking more space and manages to put menu items in strange places, that and the actual buttons aren't even that intuitive, they're just bigger. – Shraptnel Mar 12 at 10:14
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Entirely disagree. The latest Word is a huge UI improvement over the hundreds of options burried deep inside a hierarchy of menu systems. – Judah Himango Apr 4 at 17:49
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I tried it again, still hated it. My wife tried giving it a few weeks (she's a writer) and hated it as well. I then got her a mac and she preferred the new system. I use a Mac anyway. – Uri Apr 6 at 16:41
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"Thank god that this corruption never hit the Mac version." be careful with what you say... It's never too late. – Hugo May 17 at 8:20
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I've been using excel recently for some statistics analysis in my new job, and my workplace uses the windows version, and it's been a nightmare. I consider myself well versed in Excel, and most of the functionality that I'm used to has become very difficult to find. These days I just send it to my mac and remote into it. – Uri Jul 11 at 0:29
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vote up 3 vote down

Ebay

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vote up 4 vote down

TOAD for Oracle management.

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