One Vote
The very idea of democracy revolves around an individuals ability to express themselves through a secret ballot. Unfortunately, as seen so clearly in recent elections, an individuals right to express their concerns is becoming increasingly suppressed.
We like to think there are no sinister political motivations behind the recent failures - and we truly hope that is the case, however, the people designing the machines used by voters must fear for the worse. It is our opinion that proper design and development of voting machines can compensate for most sinister plots by being accessible, accurate and secure.
Accessibility
The ease in which people vote should never be an issue - but for some reason or another it always is. Using modern accessibility features and advancements our machines will be easier to use than old analog machines.
Accuracy
Simply put: voting tabulation systems need to be accurate. If not, what is the point of voting in the first place? Counting votes is a relatively simple task and we expect our machines to count votes accurately for every voter in every election. However, the impossible may happen and a vote may be miscounted, but we've thought about that: unlike nearly every other machine on the market ours comes with a paper-trail so voters can ensure their votes are counted correctly.
Security
It seems the simplest way to secure machines is to not give unscrupulous voters any opportunity to break in. Other systems use unsecure "memory cards" to record a votes, of course, ours does not. Instead, our machines use secure networks to record votes at the polling place - simple yet secure.
We expect our machines available for the 2016 General Election.