Two years ago I was working at a bigco that used Lotus Notes still. It was the cause of quite possibly the most confrontational experiences I have had with an inanimate object.<p>They also had all this shit custom software that made lotus seem alright.<p>Ironically the single best piece of software they had was a relic of an intranet site from what must have been the late 90s. It looked like shit, had about 2 lines of Javascript, every click was a page refresh, but it did exactly what it said it would do, what I expected it to do, and it did it without getting in my way in a reasonable amount of time. Bad software apparently makes us remember what is actually good about good software.
SharePoint. Our entire Intranet and project management processes are rooted to SharePoint. It may work great in a homogenous Microsoft environment, but Linux and Mac users are screwed.
Blackboard. Universities use it for managing courses, assignments, grades. It's hideous. You click a link and it takes 30 seconds for the javascript to spin up and render the page. So much feature bloat! And yet they can't even make simple tasks like data entry or file uploads easy.
Windows XP, IE8 (at least I have chrome because I'm the webmaster, but not for the rest of the mortals, because of "security issues").<p>Also the main business software is a Java webapp that is less than 10 years old but looks, feels and works like it is from the 90s.<p>EDIT: I wanted to add a desktop flash app for editing web content. This is what sucks the most, it is mostly unusable (for example, you have to create a image object -db record- before you can load a picture) and you have to do a remote desktop session to use it (yes in prod).
BMC BBCA - this was used at my previous company and trust me it sucked big time... It looked like an unfinished product, shipped in an hurry..<p>I am still confused why they took a decision to change well set MS SCCM into an product that doesn't satisfy half the need...
I'd like to see the next Gmail.<p>Gmail to me now is only 10% to 20% better than what using my ISP for mail with Thunderbird used to be before Gmail's invention. (As opposed to when it first came out and it was "Oh wow!" better than any competitor.)
Concur. Worst UI ever. (Well, probably not ever, I've heard terrible things about the Halliburton/Schlumberger stuff used in the oil industry, but worst I've come across.)