Time is running out, and if you want KAREL to be profitable, you have to release KAREL now. You no longer have the luxury of time to rewrite code, so you figure the best alternative is to document the bug, release KAREL, and start working on a patch immediately.

A month later, you release KAREL, having fixed the first bug, but leaving the second one in, documented. You immediately set your programmers to work on the patch, hoping that they can finish before the bug ever manifests itself.

Within three months, KAREL is installed in nearly all of the hospitals across the country. The LOGO team decides to abandon their project, seeing that there is no longer a profitable market left for them.

A month later, your programmers come up with an upgrade / patch for KAREL which you send, at no cost, to your entire customer base.

KAREL the Nurse brings you wild success, and boosts your company to the top of the Fortune 500. KAREL is featured on the cover of TIME as "Software Package of the Year". Building on your success with KAREL, you go on to create other highly successful programs such as Pascal the Painter and FORTRAN the flier.

Your life is a success and when you retire at the young age of 35, you build a museum dedicated to preserving the memories of the Terminator movies, Lost in Space, and 2001. Rumors abound that you have a private screening room hidden somewhere in the museum where you sometimes go to fall asleep, watching old reruns from the museums collections.