val: "imanXwin kludge"

kludge:

In information technology, a kludge (pronounced KLOOdzh) is an awkward or clumsy (but 
at least temporarily effective) solution to a programming or hardware design or 
implementation problem. According to Eric Raymond, the term is indirectly derived from 
the German klug meaning clever. Raymond considers "kludge" an incorrect spelling of 
kluge, a term of the 1940s with the same general meaning and possibly inspired by the 
Kluge paper feeder, a "fiendishly complex assortment of cams, belts, and 
linkages...devilishly difficult to repair...but oh, so clever!" 
A kludge originates because another, more elegant or appropriate solution is not 
currently possible (perhaps because of time constraints). Hardware and software 
products are sometimes the result of adding a new and basically incompatible design to 
the original design rather than redesigning the product completely. What is a kludge 
can be a matter of opinion. Users often have a different opinion than the designers, 
who understand the problems that had to be overcome. To the extent that information 
technology products are combinations of elements originating from a variety of design 
philosophies and constraints, almost any product is bound to contain some element of 
kludginess. 

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