In that case you'd be better off quoting the article.
Well, since you linked the article and said Fred said it better than you, I figured I didn't have too. It was kinda implied that you were using his words.
Mechanics differ, the end result doesn't. I suspect Fred's point is simply that - an aspect is an aspect is an aspect and assessments, declarations, and maneuvers are all "a skill roll that gives rise to an aspect, which offers a free invocation (tag) out of respect to the successfully skill roll.". The similarities far outnumber the differences.
But the end result depends on the mechanics. So it matters. Some systems will allow an aspect easier than others. Some systems will generate more interesting aspects.
"I took a bath" is a statement of fact which happened in the past - a declaration.
ehh, kinda. It is a fact, I agree, but I'm not sure it's a declaration. I come back to a specific passage on page 269, where it says,
"As part of preparation, you can use your skills
to declare you have access to some resource or
advantage that will help you cast the spell."
So it seems to be something you have. So you
have taken a bath, but it seems to be really stretching it, by letter of the law. That said in this instance the end effect is the same and the way of getting there is the same, so it truly is nit picking and not that important. For this example.
Perhaps I've missed a post or two but who was advocating making maneuvers easier? I think many should be more difficult than the "target of 3" you mentioned. It's context that matters. Lighting a fire in a downpour is difficult while lighting a fire with dry wood and good tender is comparatively easy.
Sancta did. I was wrong about 3. Not sure where I pulled it from yet, some one mentioned it might have been in the magic chapter, but I haven't gone to look. Sancta was advocating judging maneuvers based on how interesting they were. Read response 50 in this thread if your interested. I may be putting words in his mouth as he was kinda vague in his statement.
If you're talking about boosting your Discipline rolls it's technically possible but functionally difficult...as long as you're paying attention to aspect duration. Most will go away long before you finish casting a spell of any complexity.
If you're talking about boosting declaration rolls I don't see it. I'm open to being convinced though...can you describe an action you take now which makes a fact from yesterday (or even a minute ago) more likely? Have to admit I'm skeptical.
I agree with you here.
Though I would certainly allow other PC's to be present and making maneuvers to allow the caster to control the spell. They just better be aware that I would be throwing compels left and right in that situation.