I once worked in a company that used a similar approach. So, for example, the "chief architect" would file a bug in the tracker titled, "Product X does not exist". It would then be up to the engineers to "fix" it by creating the product.
That itch you're feeling is the itch I feel when I write in a LISP. Other programming languages make up too many of their own rules and get in the way.
But those are just feelings, and if you forget that, you'll bring yourself into a manic state. heh.
and it installs all the requisite dependencies. Awkwardly, god runs as root and doesn't bother with virtual environments, so there might be some bugs due to version creep
No wonder Satan rebelled. ~