Machines that didn't work properly. Poll workers who gave out incorrect information. Long lines. Confused voters. Just another typical Election Day in Georgia. In spite of those and other scattered voting problems throughout the state, Georgia appears to have avoided the kind of election meltdown on Tuesday that have given other states — think Florida in 2000 and Ohio in 2004 — a black eye. To be sure, there were problems. And to elections officials and poll watchers, just one person denied the right to vote is egregious. Though there were some problems with electronic voting machines, several elections observers on Wednesday said none of the problems appeared to rise to the level of fraud or political chicanery. Election Protection, a nonpartisan election watchdog program, received between 400 to 500 phone calls to its hotline on Tuesday, said volunteer lawyer Scott Holcomb....