Anthropomorphization
Semantically, one rich source of jargon constructions is the hackish
tendency to anthropomorphize hardware and software. This isn't done
in a naive way; hackers don't personalize their stuff in the sense of
feeling empathy with it, nor do they mystically believe that the
things they work on every day are `alive'. What is common is
to hear hardware or software talked about as though it has homunculi
talking to each other inside it, with intentions and desires. Thus,
one hears "The protocol handler got confused", or that programs
"are trying" to do things, or one may say of a routine that "its
goal in life is to X". One even hears explanations like "...
and its poor little brain couldn't understand X, and it died."
Sometimes modelling things this way actually seems to make them easier
to understand, perhaps because it's instinctively natural to think of
anything with a really complex behavioral repertoire as `like a
person' rather than `like a thing'.