The 10 most annoying programs on the Internet

dullard

Elite Member
May 21, 2001
26,042
4,689
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I clicked on the link and immediately got this message (a common error that I see since AdobeARM keeps crashing on multiple computers for me). I think #1 on the list is HIGHLY relevant.

AdobeARM.JPG
 

James Bond

Diamond Member
Jan 21, 2005
6,023
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0
I dunno, Outlook/Exchange aren't that bad.

I do agree with the rest of the list, though.
 

AnonymouseUser

Diamond Member
May 14, 2003
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Java and Flash are the only ones I have to deal with, and I couldn't imagine having to deal with all of those.
 

AnonymouseUser

Diamond Member
May 14, 2003
9,943
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For those who don't wish to open the PDF:

This list originally appeared as a photo gallery written by Rupert Goodwins, published on ZDNet.co.uk, ZDNet,
and TechRepublic.

The Internet has brought us many joys. It's rewritten the rules of business and pleasure.

And pain. For it allows what may have seemed like bright ideas at the time ('Let's use it to make sure our customers have the latest software,' for example) to turn into a stinking pit of misery—usually, but by no means always, after marketing gets its fangs in. Here are just 10 of the guilty parties that try to do the impossible: to make us hate the Internet and wish it had never been invented—and who very nearly succeed.

1 Adobe Reader
What does Adobe Reader do? Displays PDF pages. How does it do it? With as much bloody-minded bureaucracy, delay, and needless interaction as possible. Perhaps it's because we humans have been spoiled by books, where the gap between wanting to read something and reading it is as short as the time taken to lift the cover. But Reader's incessant updates (demanding you reset your computer—why?), thundering great list of modules to load, and hour-glass-provoking pauses for thought have given Portable Document Format a reputation for being as welcome as a flatulent camel in the kitchen. Which is a shame, because other lightweight PDF readers seem to manage perfectly well.

2 Apple
Oh, Apple. You created a domain where humans came first. You took usability and distilled it into an art form. Now look at you. iTunes is a music player the size of a fat-bottomed whale that gobbles resources like krill. It spends half its time trying to sell us stuff and the other half trying to stop us using it. But that's not as bad as your auto-update policy: slipping us stealth copies of Safari under the cover of important version updates to iTunes and Quicktime—what is this, Make Microsoft Look Good day?

3 Windows Update
Your machine will reset in four minutes. Your machine will not shut down until these five updates are installed. You must restart your machine now. You will install Microsoft Genuine Advantage. Please wait while these updates are installed. Please shut down all applications before applying this update. Pop! New updates are ready to be installed. And now that we've stopped you doing whatever it was you were doing (like we care), shall we go ahead and install them now, or would you rather be interrupted yet again later?
We've been kind and not talked about Vista.

4 RealPlayer
If this software turned up at your door, you'd call the police. RealPlayer commits just about every sin in the book, sprinkling itself across your desktop and offering "Free games!" It installs a "Message Center" that tells you about microcelebrities. There is more advertising embedded in the application than used to be on the front page of The Times. And you just wanted to stream The Archers. At least Europe's been spared Real's Rhapsody music shop. When we looked at a beta before a subsequently abandoned UK launch, we were given software to install. 'Disable your firewall," it commanded. "Drop dead," we replied.

5 Java
Java doesn't do anything by itself. It's a programming language. Programming languages are like sewage plants: If the average user becomes aware of them, something's gone wrong. Java doesn't know this. Java wants to be in your face. Java wants to be updated. Java wants to tell you the good news about Sun. Have you heard about Sun? Here's a nice picture of our logo. And fancy a copy of OpenOffice? No? Well, never mind. Java's installed a copy of Yahoo Toolbar in your browser instead. Because that's what programming languages are there to do, right?

6 Yahoo
And talking of Yahoo. Please stop. Please stop trying to take over my e-mail, my search engine, my home page. Please stop "updating" your IM client to include more emoticons, animations, noises, and whatnot—or at least have the good grace to produce a grown-ups' edition I can use at work without feeling like I should still be reading Smash Hits. And yes, when I ask to exit the software, that's because I really want to, not because I'm having a crisis of doubt.

And there is absolutely no point in a toolbar that just replicates all the options on your Web site's front page. Not unless you want to come across as the sort of shrill, desperate, needy software company that makes big noises about user relationships but in fact knows less about its users than the Queen does about shopping in Lidl.

7 Norton Antivirus
It's a little unfair to pick on Norton Antivirus and make it carry the sins of half the desktop malware industry—but only a little unfair. If ever a class of software deserved to be cast into the lower reaches of Hell and run on Satan's own desktop, it is this. Performance-sapping, space-hogging, noisy, irritating, and prone to inducing just as many problems as they purport to solve, these horrible, ineffective, expensive lumps of digital thuggery keep entire platoons of support engineers in business and home users in tears. We know. We get the phone calls.

8 Preinstalled software bundles
After a quarter of a century of the IBM PC, we still don't understand why so many companies feel obliged to create swathes of below-par software to install on the computers they sell. Notebook makers are the worst, and Sony the king of them all: The first job for any new Vaio owner is to strip out the layers of desktop "enhancements," media '"managers," and system "control software" that serve only to get in the way of doing things the way you know how to do them, interfere with other software packages, and suck up such enormous amounts of resources on start-up that two weeks after you've bought one, you're still not sure whether it's broken or not.

9 Outlook/Exchange
Free, Web-based e-mail systems have more storage than you can use. They have powerful, accurate, swift search systems. They have clean interfaces, with threaded conversations and sane attachment management. Then there's Microsoft's Outlook. Things have been getting better for those whose corporate upgrade strategy allows it, but with major updates happening every four years or so, that's a long time to be looking at a non-threaded, license-restricted storage-squeezed, treacle-slow-searching e-mail system. Especially while the online services get better and better, and doubly so now that e-mail is the single most important business application
ever created.

10 Flash
There's nothing wrong with Flash, provided you don't use it to construct Web sites where people want to find information, navigate easily, or do anything beyond passively consume exactly what you choose to give them in exactly the way you've decided. There's also nothing wrong with using it for a splendid splash screen replete with movies, sound and animation—if you don't mind frustrating, annoying, and possibly even driving away people who might, just might, have something better to do. In fact, Flash-based Web sites are quite possibly one of the most useful pieces of network technology around. Like heroin or microlights, they ensure that those who think it's a good idea aren't around to annoy us for too long.
 
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Kalmah

Diamond Member
Oct 2, 2003
3,692
1
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99% of the time when I click on a PDF my browser crashes. Well it freezes for about 2 minutes first until I can find a way to end-task.

For the life of me I don't know how this one managed to pull up without a problem. That list is dead-on. It should be shared with all of the developers of the things in the list.
 

acheron

Diamond Member
May 27, 2008
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who still uses Realplayer? The <marquee> pseudo-HTML tag is annoying too, but as it's not 1998 anymore, that's irrelevant.

I'd move Flash to #2 (or just combine it with Reader as "anything Adobe" and leave it as #1), but otherwise it's a good list.
 

Nitemare

Lifer
Feb 8, 2001
35,461
4
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who still uses Realplayer? The <marquee> pseudo-HTML tag is annoying too, but as it's not 1998 anymore, that's irrelevant.

I'd move Flash to #2 (or just combine it with Reader as "anything Adobe" and leave it as #1), but otherwise it's a good list.

Yes flashblock is the first plugin I download for Firefox
 

marvdmartian

Diamond Member
Apr 12, 2002
5,444
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I'd have to give top honors (so to speak) to Quicktime and Realplayer. Both of which have not been seen on my computers since I discovered Media Player Classic and VLC.

What was really neat was when Apple decided that the only way you could download and install Quicktime is if you also accepted and installed iTunes. You could always uninstall iTunes afterwards, but you HAD to install it while installing Quicktime. That's when I realized, beyond a doubt, that Apple meant to control every person's life, in every way, if they had their way. :rolleyes:
 

SphinxnihpS

Diamond Member
Feb 17, 2005
8,368
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91
Can't really say I disagree with the list

Top 10 annoying software programs

Apple ...because they're a software program.

Java ...is also a program.

Yahoo ...probably the name of the program that wrote this list.

Preinstalled software bundles ...because chocolate ice cream is a food.
 

KMFJD

Lifer
Aug 11, 2005
32,671
52,114
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Apple Itunes seems to be the only mailing address that continually defeats Gmail spam filters, and their unsubscribtion method does not work....damn you apple

/and a big fuck you to Adobe Acrobat as well, king of bloat
 

Lotheron

Platinum Member
Oct 21, 2002
2,188
4
71
Java doesn't do anything by itself. It's a programming language. Programming languages are like sewage plants:
If the average user becomes aware of them, something's gone wrong.

Best line on the list!
 

Fir

Senior member
Jan 15, 2010
484
194
116
WAOL.EXE

Damn that's just a virus on its own. The death of AOL shall be celebrated by running on the streets firing off large caliber weapons pointed in the air. (just kidding)

But I cannot say it enough! I HATE AOL! Sorry if anyone here likes AOL you will just have to deal.