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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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225 Answers

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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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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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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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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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Ebay

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Basically any program that overrides standard keyboard shortcuts like command+C and command+V for copy/paste (or in the windows world when control+insert doesn't copy or shift+insert doesn't paste it really ticks me off).

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See just about anything Bruce Tognazzini has been writing about for aeons, my (least) favorite is applications that steal focus.

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My own in my latest project.

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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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Most cell phones.

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We've got this Oster toaster oven. Probably large enough to cook a turkey, but is seldom used for anything larger than two slices of bread. I don't even want to think about how much energy this thing wastes heating up the entirety of its enormous chamber.

Anyhow, the buttons on this thing are those idiotic flush pressure type. Buttons marked "start", "stop" and "toast", which you'd expect to be prominent, are buried within a poorly arranged cluster of about a dozen buttons. I have to stare at this piece of garbage for ten seconds to figure out how to make toast or to stop it once it's incinerated another perfoectly innocent slice of bread.

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www.erightsoft.com/SUPER.html

The program is great in converting any type of video or audio files into other formats but the GUI is so terrible and hard to use...it's just pain!

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  • GIMP
  • Blender 3D
  • Internet Explorer 1-6
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This. Fortunately I was able to ditch it. :)

alt text

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Stupidest dialog boxes ever.

Mac shareware version of Risk

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I am sure you will read this one twice.Couldn't control myself laughing at it.How worse can something be?

Microsoft's SQL Server 6.5 -- Enterprise Manager

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SharePoint. Hands down awful for the user community. What were they thinking? You have constantly scroll and click way too much when configuring web parts. And don't even think you'll be able to train users to update content - it's way too complicated, and people who have other CMS systems revolt when they have to click Site Actions, find the web part, click Edit, scroll to right, scroll down, then type a URL - oh wait, I forgot to copy the URL so I have to start over.

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Amazon website. How do you log out once you have logged in?

There is a button that says "Not " but why would you click that when you are you!?

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

Thankfully this corruption never hits 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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A long time ago Oracle had an application similar to Microsoft's query analyzer where you could type in pl/sql - but the window where you entered code was about 8 characters wide by 10 characters long (OK I am sure I am exaggerating a bit). You could never see more than a tiny fraction of what you were coding. There was no way to increase the size of that little window.

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I must agree with blender, It's what I learned on. But trying to go back to it after using 3DS Max for a while is impossible. Everything is buried under so many tabs.

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I'd say Windows Explorer. That "user-friendly" interface with nice shortcuts turns an average computer newbie into a completely clueless idiot after a couple of years. Re-educating somebody who clicks without reading and thinking first is very hard, because this becomes a rock-solid habit and affects the way one thinks.

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That's not an indicator of a bad GUI. In fact, quite the opposite. The GUI is so simplistic that even the most uneducated computer newbie can master it in a short time. That you find most users forget the more complicated methods after using it is a testament to its usefulness, not harm. – Chris Dec 5 '08 at 14:18
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it makes thing seem simpler than they are. people will refuse to see "the light" because they're blinded by the very simplistic gui that they think it's all there is to it. they become resistant to learning more. – hasen j Mar 30 at 13:16
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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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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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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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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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Settings in Outlook 2003...

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Gotta but the escape button in theDraw (an early 90's ASCII drawing editor) being the Help button.

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How about clicking on "start" to end a Windows session?

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Are you sure, because I'm using Vista and with Aero turned off I still have a "Start" button... and I also have 9 widgets within the menu to sleep, lock, switch user, log off, lock again, restart, sleep again, hibernate, or shut down. – John Cromartie May 28 at 15:56
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this is an old, tired rant. I hate microsoft enough as anyone else but it's not really that huge of a travesty. it's funny and it's ironic to be sure, but at the end of the day you're complaining that a button should say "system-wide functions and services are here" rather than "start". <shrug> – Bryan Oakley May 28 at 16:29
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or the fact that, in XP's default configuration, the first thing you CAN click in the start menu is "Shut Down..." – A. Scagnelli May 28 at 16:39
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Without a doubt for me it's the "are you sure you want to exit" popup that some apps seem to insist on displaying. 99.99999% of the time I'm certain I want to exit, yet 100% of the time I have to respond to this dialog.

Fortunately not too many apps do this, but when I encounter one it drives me up the wall.

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