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Annoying Web

Annoying Web

Nov 20, 2009

The 65 Most Annoying things about the Web Today.

by Bra­dley Heb­don.

We’ve come a long way on the web today. Or have we?  While we’ve inno­va­ted in many areas, we’ve also con­ti­nued to dis­re­gard pre-existing issues. And in some cases, we have also cre­a­ted new ones. Here is my list of the top 65 most annoying things about the web today. They’re in no par­ti­cu­lar order, but I have orga­ni­zed them into what I con­si­der core groups.

Using the Web can still be a very annoying experience!

Poor Design

  1. Ille­gi­ble text. I can’t read that, it’s too small. And what on earth is that font called?
  2. Busy back­grounds.  Oh MyS­pace, why do you allow users to cre­ate pro­fi­les like that? My eyes hurt.
  3. Obs­cure links. I’m con­fu­sed, can I click on that or not? Oh I get it, you don’t want me to view other pages.
  4. Flyouts that are too large. Holy crap Yahoo!  This is a page within a flyout!
  5. Drop-down menu navi­ga­tion too many levels deep. OK, if I slo­wly move my mouse this way first… dam­mit Jim, I’m a doc­tor not a magician!
  6. Com­pli­ca­ted navi­ga­tion. I just want to get to that page, the one over there! Oh I see, you want me to com­plete the maze first.
  7. Abu­sed cen­ter­pi­e­ces. Aren’t cen­ter­pi­e­ces sup­po­sed to serve as mecha­nisms for pro­mo­tion, rather than areas to cram an entire page’s worth of con­tent into itself? Call me an ide­a­list, I guess.
  8. Poor navi­ga­tion labels. Give me a clue and use labels that make sense!
  9. Clut­ter & chaos. With no empha­sis or infor­ma­tion hie­rar­chy, it’s dif­fi­cult for me to know what to look at, and what to do next.
  10. Ugly WAPs. Many com­pa­nies treat their WAP sites like a defor­med step-child they keep in the basement.
  11. Splash scre­ens. Nice, a road block between your user and your home page.

Unfin­da­ble Information

  1. Dys­func­ti­o­nal site search. (Sigh) Why didn’t this site just use Google?
  2. Too many blog cate­go­ries. Isn’t this what tags were meant for?
  3. Con­tact info. I just want to speak to them on the phone! And when I say “them” i mean a human.
  4. Invi­si­ble sign in. OK, so I regis­te­red, but how do I sign in?
  5. Hid­den account clo­sure. I guess I’m a mem­ber for life now?
  6. Uns­can­na­ble info. I want to quic­kly know if this arti­cle is rele­vant. But alas, huge para­graphs, long hea­dli­nes and no subhe­a­dings make for an uns­can­na­ble chunk of data, and an indi­ges­ti­ble piece of gristle.

No Con­tent Strategy

  1. No focus. Yada, yada, yada. Get to the point, what’s your mes­sage and what do you offer?
  2. Spel­ling & gram­mar. Spel­ling mis­ta­kes are hard to for­give and really hurt credibility.
  3. Inef­fec­tive pro­duct pages: What am I buying? Why should I buy this? Help me unders­tand, and I’ll move down the pur­chase funnel!
  4. Out­da­ted. There’s nothing more thril­ling than seeing a blog fro­zen in time. At some point, a land­fill for web­si­tes is going to be needed.
  5. Small pho­tos. Why would I buy something I can­not see?

Auto-Behavior

  1. Auto-playing home page video. Take note ESPN.com: the first thing I do when coming to your site is scram­ble to find the video pause but­ton. And that’s when I’m sur­fing from home.
  2. Auto brow­ser resi­zing. And you did that because?
  3. Cus­to­mer ser­vice nags. Iro­nic really. Chat pop-ups appear like genies out of a lamp when I don’t need them.
  4. Theme tunes. Got to love that auto-play music, espe­ci­ally when it cycles over and over and over, and over.
  5. Auto opt-ins. It seems like an auto­ma­tic opt-in is a con­tra­dic­tion in terms to me. No I don’t want your news­let­ter, and if I did, I’d opt-in.

Evil Forms

  1. Unre­a­da­ble capt­chas. Pure Evil. If I had a brick, why I would…
  2. Too many fields. This is utterly exhaus­ting. Oh for­get it, I’m going to aban­don this form.
  3. Cryp­tic error mes­sa­ging. OK, so I made a mis­take. If you used English, I might be able to fix it.
  4. No con­fir­ma­tion. Was I suc­ces­s­ful or not? I’m loo­king for anything here, a “thank-you”, a “job well done”, a “good boy”… anything that con­firms the form was indeed a sub­mit­ted form.
  5. Too many cons­traints. I want to add my Cana­dian zip code, but you’re vali­da­ting against the US for­mat only!
  6. Too small fields. How I’m sup­po­sed to enter my street address in that state-sized field?
  7. The reset but­ton. Do we really need this? I espe­ci­ally love it when I acci­den­tally press “reset” ins­tead of “sub­mit”. It’s espe­ci­ally satisfying when it’s a long form.

Intru­sive Advertising

  1. Pop-ups. And that inclu­des those fancy, flashy, moving, hard-to-close ones. Are you seri­ous? This is 2009.
  2. Inters­ti­ti­als. Thanks for adding another click and cre­a­ting a bar­rier between me and your con­tent! Give me a rea­son to leave, I dare you.
  3. Flyouts via links in con­tent. Oh darn, I didn’t know that was an ad! Thanks for punishing me.
  4. Too many Goo­gle ads. I know there’s some con­tent around here….
  5. Long video pre-rolls. Is this ad ever going to end? Hang on; I for­got what video I clic­ked on.
  6. The bus stop. Home pages that resem­ble bus stops — flyers, pos­ters, graf­fiti all shou­ting at me. Some­ti­mes, I swear I can even smell urine.

Accounts

  1. Remem­be­ring user names and pas­swords. Seri­ously, how many do I need to keep track of? Just give me Face­book con­nect already!
  2. Being for­ced to regis­ter for pur­cha­ses. I just want to buy it, OK? For­get it, I’m going elsewhere.
  3. For­ced pas­sword reset. I just want to know my password! The one I chose but have for­got­ten. I know you know.
  4. Get­ting loc­ked out. I get the three-attempts-and-you’re-out idea, but it would be nice to know the rules before hand!
  5. Pas­sword sent by “snail mail”. I’m not sure whether to laugh or cry. Should I expect a scroll to be deli­ve­red and read by a mes­sen­ger?

Abuse

  1. Spam. We still can­not cure this disease?
  2. Viru­ses. If I was a cons­pi­racy the­o­rist, I’d say the anti-virus com­pa­nies were cre­a­ting these. You know, sup­ply and demand and all.
  3. Phishing. Par­ti­cu­larly sne­aky; and defi­ni­tely a step beyond annoying.
  4. Trolls on messageboards/blogs. Oh well, that’s life I guess  – art imi­ta­ting life and all.
  5. Fake pro­fi­les. Am I fol­lowing the real Ste­ven Haw­king on Twit­ter? It says here he went bowling last night.
  6. Face­book app invi­ta­ti­ons. For the thou­sandth time, no I do not want to play Mob Wars, and no I don’t want a “pet in an egg” either.

Tech­no­logy

  1. Explo­rer 6. I speak for all deve­lo­pers here, if there’s a plug attached, please pull it. RIP Explo­rer 6.
  2. Plug-ins. Not only do I have to down­load another plug-in, I have to keep these things current!
  3. Entire sites built in flash. I don’t get it, why?
  4. PDF ove­ruse. Why couldn’t this PDF just be a web page?
  5. Dell’s Net­book track­pad. Desig­ned to be web brow­sing device, Dell’s Mini 10 track­pad has a tril­lion bells and whis­tles, but can­not ful­fill basic tasks like moving the cur­sor from point A to point B without going to C first.
  6. Small net­book scre­ens. While mobile devi­ces have opti­mi­zed views for their screens, Netbooks and their 9 and 10 inch scre­ens are caught in a weird place.
  7. Incon­sis­tent colors. Opti­mi­zing colors and con­trast across both Macs and PCs is a desig­ners nightmare.
  8. Char­ging for Wi-Fi. Pro­vide it free of charge, and the patrons will come!

Wai­ting

  1. Slow page load. OK that’s it, I’ve been pati­ent and their 3 seconds are up.
  2. Com­ment appro­val. I thought, I arti­cu­la­ted, I com­men­ted, I wai­ted. Nothing.  That will teach me to contribute.
  3. Black-hole between orde­ring and ship­ping. I took me 5 minu­tes to order this lap­top, why isn’t it get­ting ship­ped? Should I place my order again? Should I can­cel this order? What’s the order status?
  4. Twit­ter is down again. I’m star­ting to think this is a fea­ture. One akin to a long line out­side a trendy night club.
  5. Cus­to­mer ser­vice. Since I can­not get a human on the phone, a 24 hour res­ponse time to my e-mail is not accep­ta­ble. Well look at that, I guess you just quan­ti­fied the value of my business.
  6. Sub­mis­sion timers. I saw this really great arti­cle! I know, I’ll post it on Reddit. And there’s another one, I’ll post that on Red­dit too. What, I have to wait 10 minu­tes to post another article? That will  teach me to contribute.




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