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What application, language, or other software product name makes you cringe every time you hear it; or was just an astoundingly bad choice from a marketing perspective?

One name per answer, vote up the worst.

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77 Answers

vote up 6 vote down

FastDic: Firefox Add-on

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vote up 5 vote down

form1.exe ?

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vote up 6 vote down

CLAiT. It's an IT qualification available in Europe. It stands for Computer Literacy and Information Technology. It may look fine on the surface but two things baffle me,

  1. The make the "i" lowercase when it really should be the "a"
  2. The A shouldn't be there - it represents "and" and conjunctions shouldn't be acronymised

So anyone who has done the course all have CLIT's. Apparently that's the reason for the strange name. I guess it was funnier when I was younger!

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vote up -1 vote down

IIS it's so poor.

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vote up 0 vote down

4D.

I remember searching for help about it on the Internet (Which was already difficult since it's kind of obscure) and finding memory dumps...

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vote up 5 vote down

Anything with 'Smart', 'Intelli', 'My' or 'i' in its name.

Makes me want to puke.

'Mobile Partner' for extablishing GSM data connections (Yes, in windows land you need to have vendor specific application littering all over you system32 to accomplish this). I really don't want to have affairs with My Mobile Partners, at least not with the Huawai E220 ones.

Why not "My Little Secret Mobile Lover(TM)"?

Or 'My iSmart IntelliPartner Enterprise Edition'.

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vote up 0 vote down

I worked on a software called ZEUS. God of gods... The most pretentious name I´ve ever seen.

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vote up 1 vote down

I know it's not strictly a product - maybe it falls under the category of language - but I think "JSON" (Javascript Object Notation) is a really weak name.

Try holding a debate about it when there's someone on the team called Jason.

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vote up 13 vote down

iPod,
do you pod too?

YouTube,
got problems with my tube? btw, you forgot the 'r' ...

MySQL,
it's not yours 'kay?

phpMyAdmin?
err, how do i php your admin?

.. okay not too funny though .. sorry :|

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vote up 4 vote down

The MS-DOS recover command had the opposite effect if you didn't know what it was for.

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vote up 9 vote down

Another trio of product names that still confuse people to this day:

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1  
I doubt most people would even remember DIVX, but I agree the original DiVX ;-) name was retarded. – Adam Lassek Nov 6 '08 at 15:01
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vote up 1 vote down

The Unix "kill" command is my favorite - kill is used to send messages to processes (including, but not limited to "kill yourself" messages).

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vote up 1 vote down

Naming one product after a substring contained in another product's name is rarely a good idea, especially when they do almost the same thing. The only way this could be more confusing is if the IBM version had used the word "Connector":

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vote up 4 vote down

R

It's a statistics package. I think the name is some kind of play on S which was a similar preceding thing, but I find myself repeating it every time I bring it up to someone who's not familiar with it.

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5  
- "What do you program on, pirate?" - "aarrr!." Okay, where do I leave my banned OpenID? – voyager Jul 30 at 16:33
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vote up 16 vote down

http://www.libpr0n.com/

Its the library firefox uses to process its images.

I'm really not kidding.

There's also the handy library "confuse"

Which is a Configuration Parser Library.

And then theres LibEET, from the enlightenment family. The joke only shows up at link time with

 gcc   -leet
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vote up 70 vote down

.NET.

Utterly meaningless, and impossible to search for.

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1  
On the other hand, it lends it self nicely to domain names eg. www.asp.net etc :) – Dan Diplo Sep 7 at 16:17
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vote up 20 vote down

Cuil. I knew it was doomed as soon as I figured out how it was meant to be pronounced.

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vote up 21 vote down

LLBLGEN PRO

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It never occured to me as a poor name choice ;) :P – Frans Bouma Dec 11 '08 at 19:27
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vote up 16 vote down

Maybe I missed it but I'm surprised no one mentioned Microsoft Bob.

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More of a bad product than a bad name. – Martin Brown Sep 7 at 16:46
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vote up -4 vote down

+1 vote for GIMP, worst name ever even chimp would be better

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You know, the little arrow above the big number on the left is used to upvote a comment you like. – Sergio Acosta Nov 5 '08 at 9:42
vote up 6 vote down

Visual Age for Java

slow clap

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vote up 14 vote down

Dog pile (nothing like proclaiming your product to be s**t).

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vote up 8 vote down

I know these are codecs and not applications, but I think it's hard to disagree with the fact that they could have chosen better names:

1) Ogg Theora 2) Ogg Vorbis

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That's not even the worst. The next-generation Theora encoder is named... Thusnelda. Seriously. – Adam Lassek Nov 6 '08 at 14:52
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vote up 14 vote down

My favorite for the longest time was Microsoft's embedded operating system.

WinCE. Pronounced "Wince".

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vote up 21 vote down

The C and D programming languages always bug me because it is so hard to search for things about them. It's like giving something the acronym T.H.E. for something. Same goes for the X window system and for .net in general.

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For a while there searching for F# yielded nothing but musical theory :( – Jim Burger Nov 5 '08 at 9:21
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For a while, Googling for "The Who" without quotation marks resulted in " 'The' is a very common word and was excluded from your search. 'Who' is a very common word and was excluded from your search." – Adam Rosenfield Nov 5 '08 at 16:32
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vote up -1 vote down

Acrobat. When it was released, MacWeek awarded the "Feet of Clay Award" to Adobe marketing for waiting forever to select a name and then picking something meaningless.

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vote up 9 vote down

ITITS

Information Technology Invoice Tracking System

was-is used to track contractor billing and payment.

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vote up 1 vote down

My pet peeve has always been paint.net.

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I think the problem is that .NET is a retarded name, and thus anything it gets attached to becomes retarded by association. – davr Nov 4 '08 at 21:43
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Paint.Net is emblematic of the same thinking that causes g/k syndrome in Gnome/KDE, or prefacing every application with 'Win'. It's just lazy. – Adam Lassek Nov 6 '08 at 14:59
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vote up 25 vote down

Harvest

a very large, and very bad revision-control system. The name sounds like a low-budget horror movie. Using the software is best characterized by:

"Software by Stephen King, User Interface by Salvador Dali"
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BWA HAHAHAHAHA. Thats a great line. – StingyJack Nov 4 '08 at 20:48
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vote up 55 vote down

Microsofts

Critical

Update

Notification

Tool

..now the Critical Update Notification Utility 'nuff said. That lasted about month.

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4  
There's a line in the Seattle mass transit system called the South Lake Union Trolley. For obvious reasons, they later changed to the South Lake Union Streetcar. But not before the name stuck. – BradC Nov 21 '08 at 21:46
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@BradC, I have a T-Shirt that says "I rode the South Lake Union Trolley" – Corey Ross Sep 7 at 16:35
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