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enhancement vs. bug



In a recent news story (the one in Ohio) a Diebold spokesperson (a VP) called patches and bug fixes supplied by Diebold *enhancements*.

This might be the biz as usual, where languaging is at issue. In fact it is. Language can hide lies.
Professionals say *we've got an issue*, while joe-in-the-street says, *we've got a problem*. See how this works?
Now let's be careful when we are listening.


If I hire you to install software on my system and a bug shows up, I expect you to fix the bug and not have to pay you to fix things that you didn't get right in the first place.
If you install something that you call an *enhancement*, I probably shouldn't be surprised if I get an invoice.


When Diebold says, *we added those enhancements in Maryland*, in response to bugs and flaws, I wonder how big the invoice was that the Maryland SoS received?

I told Kell that we ought to call them *enchantments*, because a) they only work by chance, and b) black box voting is enchanted -- all magic.

Read closely. Pay attention to what vendors are saying. In their own words they usually telegraph the meaning of their claims or the defense of their products.

paul tiger