Fellow user albertgudl asked this question a year ago:[1]<p>"What are products you use frequently but still hate/they suck? What are products you use frequently but think they could be done better?"<p>Does anyone have something to add this year?<p>[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=19715548
Amazon.com<p>If I don't find what I need in the first few results I have to scroll endlessly. No amount of filtering or sorting helps.<p>The browsing experience is lacking. I think most people have been trained to buy specific items, rather than searching for the product that is good for them.
Spotify. The Mac desktop app often stops being able to play songs until you can restart the app, an issue they've been aware of for months if not a year. The catalogue is an absolute mess and there's no way to report metadata issues, or transparency about which editions records are based on.<p>But it syncs nicely with my phone, lets me download songs for listening on planes, and has decent little features like discovery playlists.
As a former power user of Inbox, Gmail.<p>It has a ton of icons and labels and whatnot that for me provide only clutter. They never completely integrated the 'tasks' or 'notes' or whatever they used to call it either. It's also much slower to load.
Calibre for book library management. The UI stinks to high hell but apparently developer DGAF.<p>Has so many great features and i'm not sure of any alternatives that gets even close what calibre can do.
There are so many - where to start?<p>- Microsoft Outlook, Excel, Word (the desktop apps)<p>- Google Sheets, Android, GMail<p>- Adobe Creative Suite (Photoshop, Illustrator, After Effects etc)<p>- Git, GitHub<p>- Apple Finder<p>- Dropbox, Dropbox Paper<p>Not products, but technologies: most programming languages, CSS, most APIs, anything with the description "static site generator"
Taking regular bicycles on elevators or other tight spaces. Getting my bike up to my apartment is a huge hassle, but leaving it outside will get it stolen. I wish there were a quicker way to disassemble a standard, non-folding bike on the fly.