people who think that coolness is more important than stability
people who use prototypes on methods as a gotcha for procedural calls
people in the Perl community who don't care if their software works/builds on MS machines
people who think that users should learn cryptic CLI interfaces when they don't even have time to learn simple GUI's
programmers that take weeks to write a GUI that reproduces the behaviour of a common CLI tool or a Perl one liner and then expect you to be impressed
those who can't accept that VB is an excellent GUI development tool
those who can't see that theres more to do in programming than making sure that their VB data grid looks cool.
those that only know VB
every MS excec that voted 'no' on maintaining good links with the Open Source Community
people who don't use source control
coworkers who don't answer emails in a reasonably prompt fashion
people who use M$ as a way to put down Microsoft Products, but whose experience of the same is limited to 9x/Me or even worse DOS
users who think "it doesnt work" is a good error description, even though the bug report form has countless hints to provide more useful information
those who think that all phone numbers are in (XXX)YYY-ZZZZ format.
web site developers that think that the only two countries in the world are "USA" and "CAN"
web site developers that think that the only two countries in the world with states are "USA" and "CAN"
people who think that if an OS doesn't do something the same way as *NIX does, that the OS must be violating some standard
whoever was responsible for the fact that even though the world pretty much universally uses arabic numerals, we can't settle on just one symbol for the decimal point
everyone who thinks that YY/MM/DD or MM/DD/YY or DD/MM/YY or pretty well anything other than YYYY/MM/DD is a sane way to write a readable date stamp
for every person who says "we can't do that, we've never done it before"
who --'d you without a good reason ;-)
people who think that they should endlessly profit from a lucky few years of intellectual activity when whatever they built was only on the shoulders of countless unsung others before them