Admittedly, the purpose of the term has been lost a bit, but rather than ban the term, why not remind people of the purpose?
"Technical debt" was never a technical term. It is an analogy to help non-technical people understand why engineering quality matters. People understand financial debt and why it costs more in the long run to carry a lot of it. "Technical debt" is supposed to be a quick way to explain why not to carry under-engineered solutions for a long time. It is supposed to express the utility of choosing to take it on as a strategic decision to move towards a goal faster, combined with the longer term pain of paying it off.
As an analogy, it remains a highly effective term.
1 comment
[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 11.6 ms ] thread"Technical debt" was never a technical term. It is an analogy to help non-technical people understand why engineering quality matters. People understand financial debt and why it costs more in the long run to carry a lot of it. "Technical debt" is supposed to be a quick way to explain why not to carry under-engineered solutions for a long time. It is supposed to express the utility of choosing to take it on as a strategic decision to move towards a goal faster, combined with the longer term pain of paying it off.
As an analogy, it remains a highly effective term.