Quickbooks. Intuit can be burned to the ground.
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LibreOffice Calc.
Pro is that my company is very pro-linux.
Con is that calc is so broken. At first, I thought it was just me. But even our accountants were quietly building spreadsheets in Google Sheets and then "pretending" like they use Calc.
There's a reason people pay for office. As shitty as Microsoft is, they know how to make a spreadsheet.
We had one application we used (that got retired two years ago) where Control-C had been mapped to bring up a calendar.
There was no need for a calendar in the application. It didn't enable other features or anything that I could tell.
But the software was also woefully out-of-date. They'd decided not to pay for the updated version.
Was quite happy to leave Lotus Notes behind. Will be almost as happy to leave MS Dynamics 365 behind at some future point.
In-house "temporary" assembly line monitor written in Object Pascal around 2006, mostly unchanged since, too badly written to be used effectively, but too mission-critical to risk downtime with a potential fix/replacement.
Moodle.
Trying to turn it into an enterprise level LMS without paying any money was an interesting nightmare.
The Foreman/Red Hat Satellite. Many people wont know what it is, but it's the worst, bugiest, slowest piece of garbage I've ever touched.
Also Windows... I'm a Linux sysadmin but my work computer "needs" to use Windows and I've never disliked it as much as when I've been forced to work with it. Why is the virtual desktop experience so trash???
Asana is a laggy piece of shit on any hardware with any internet connection if the board is big enough. And they are usually big.
Anything related to XCode is a fucking nightmare.
Maybe a bit niche, but the Scanco software for computed tomography analysis. Cant remember what it’s called off the top of my head. It’s horribly dated and unintuitive. It does work though! My favorite was when we stopped being able to use it for several weeks, we thought it was busted. We contacted the company for help and they informed us that with a new update the numlock key toggled a “feature” that prevented editing files. No visual representation that editing was locked. Wild
Custom made software for controlling electro -plating factory.
It runned on 2 win10 machines, used some combination of excel and proper database software. Multiple people needed to have access, so remote access tool ...
So basically they added multiple features in 10 years and by the time I worked there it was a mess.
Not a job, but I was happy to stop using Blackboard when I left community college lmao.
Carbon Black. As a software developer, running unknown/untrusted binaries is kind of a big part of my job. We also had a MITM SSL-intercepting proxy which made my life miserable, especially when dealing with Docker containers. I actually ended up patching Docker to automatically inject the certificates and proxy environment variables.
On the plus side I learned a lot about certificate errors which has made me the go-to guy for any SSL issues in my current job.
Oh, and Tivoli Storage Manager/IBM Storage Protection. What a fucking garbage "data protection" application. Fucker couldn't even give me a reliable system state restore in modern OSs.
I'm not leaving, but damn I have no love for AS400. The 80s are over, but not when it comes to tracking our production.
My company got acquired by a competitor, we had been running on PeopleSoft, and I don't remember the software the new company used but it was a soul sucking black screen with basically a DOS prompt that you had to learn key combinations to use. I had never thought I cared about the beautiful visual interface of PeopleSoft but my God it turned out I did.
- Service Plus
- Salesforce
- Lotus Notes
I once had to rebuild some legacy code for a digital scoreboard. The code was written in a code mentioned in "Office Space". I think it was called top speed.
Until that day I thought it was a made up language.
A custom built CRM and email replacement system built using MS Access as the front end and MSSQL server running on SBS2003 as the back end.
I left in 2010 and they were still using it.