surreal and more surreal
#241
Posted 2013-October-22, 09:46
The problems will be fixed. The real test of Obamacare is how well it works after the initial technical problems are behind us. From what I have heard, the initial reaction to the substance of the program is quite favorable.
#242
Posted 2013-October-22, 10:06
Some years back, actually quite a few years back, something similar happened where I wroked. A much smaller system, rolled out with great fanfare, and great failure. "It was working fine". "Too many people were using it at once". "People were not reading the directins properly" etc. Finally someone realized the system was not working properly. Really? What a guy!
That there should be glitches is to be expected, certainly that is so. As I get it, "glitch", or "hitch", is not the word that comes to mind for people who actually have to try and cope with it.
#243
Posted 2013-October-22, 10:08
#244
Posted 2013-October-22, 11:47
y66, on 2013-October-22, 10:08, said:
Seems like a particularly inappropriate metaphor. The Titanic sailed from England on a smooth journey initially until it ran into the iceberg, which proved fatal. The web launch was rocky from the beginning - but not fatal - and, hopefully, the problems will be corrected and it will be smooth sailing thereafter.
#245
Posted 2013-October-22, 11:57
At
http://www.washingto...src=nl_politics
and elsewhere we find Obama saying:
Theres no sugarcoating it: The Web site is too slow; people have been getting stuck during the application process, he said at a White House event.
Too slow? Is that what people have been saying? I have been hearing "I can't get on", "It mishandles the data" and other such things.
The lead paragraph from the story above says
"Days before the launch of President Obamas online health insurance marketplace, government officials and contractors tested a key part of the Web site to see whether it could handle tens of thousands of consumers at the same time. It crashed after a simulation in which just a few hundred people tried to log on simultaneously."
"There is no sugarcoating it, the cabins on the Titanic are too damp", to use your analogy.
#246
Posted 2013-October-22, 12:38
kenberg, on 2013-October-22, 11:57, said:
I don't doubt that folks have had problems. I avoided the site the first couple of weeks (as I do with all new sites), then set up an account pretty easily without any particular slowdowns or problems. That's not to say that I won't run into a problem in the future, but I wonder how many folks complaining about the website's problems have actually experienced them personally.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists that is why they invented hell. Bertrand Russell
#247
Posted 2013-October-22, 13:13
PassedOut, on 2013-October-22, 12:38, said:
That is very good to hear. I don't need to use it, or at least I don't think that I do, but I know several who will need to use it. The reports I have heard have not been encouraging.
So you are right, I have not had direct experience here. There was a discussion recently on the local public television station (WETA) with some wh had tried it. As I recall, only one successfully completed the entire venture, and that was after a lot of difficulty.
It seems to me that if they knew there were problems and knew what they were, it would have been very senssible to just hold it up a bit. That way they would have free access for fixing it. This way they shut it down for a few hours at a time, then bring it back up, then shut it down and so on. Seems dumb to me.
#248
Posted 2013-October-22, 13:21
kenberg, on 2013-October-22, 13:13, said:
Based on the news reports, I had expected problems. I'm used to news reports being sensationalized, but still expected to see some sort of bug or unsatisfactory performance. Was a bit surprised at how easily and smoothly everything went for me. That's not to say, of course, that I won't be finding myself swearing a blue streak at it sometime in the future.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists that is why they invented hell. Bertrand Russell
#249
Posted 2013-October-22, 13:27
kenberg, on 2013-October-22, 13:13, said:
So you are right, I have not had direct experience here. There was a discussion recently on the local public television station (WETA) with some wh had tried it. As I recall, only one successfully completed the entire venture, and that was after a lot of difficulty.
It seems to me that if they knew there were problems and knew what they were, it would have been very senssible to just hold it up a bit. That way they would have free access for fixing it. This way they shut it down for a few hours at a time, then bring it back up, then shut it down and so on. Seems dumb to me.
Dumb seems to be par for the course in web sites. Let me pass along a recent experience.
My girlfriend uses Yahoo mail for her e-mail. Recently, Yahoo changed the appearance and functionality of its e-mail site. Not only do users have to get used to a different appearance for no obvious reason, but some of the functions that they used in the past are no longer available. My girlfriend complained to me about it, telling me that some things she used to be able to do to handle a bunch of e-mails at once she now has to do one at a time. I didn't follow exactly what she was trying to do, but the intent was clear - the new setup causes more work, not less. Furthermore, I saw a note on Yahoo about the changes to the mail site, and Yahoo essentially said get used to it because they were not going back.
I only use Yahoo mail for my fantasy football league, which is on Yahoo. Since we started this season of fantasy football, my Yahoo mail account has been disabled 3 times. I could not reactivate my account using any of the tools online - I had to call Yahoo help by phone. They gave me the e-mail address of Yahoo technical support. In the first two instances, this resulted in a quick fix. This last time I received e-mail responses essentially saying it was a temporary problem and it would resolve itself. My response to that was I told them where to put their temporary problem and to fix my account, which they did. So, at least for now, I have access to my Yahoo e-mail account.
The bottom line is that it is not necessarily that easy to get a website to work properly, especially when you have a lot of people trying to use it at the same time. The Obamacare website is brand new - it stands to reason that there would be some problems. The Yahoo e-mail site has been up and running for decades. And they are still having problems.
#250
Posted 2013-October-22, 13:38
ArtK78, on 2013-October-22, 13:27, said:
Still, the fact that lots of commercial websites have problems is not all that comforting for folks who need healthcare. I do expect better from the US government than from corporations, and I hope folks get the service they need. (Maybe they took the site up too quickly because all of the news at the time was about the government shutdown. I'm not a politician, so often can't figure out what goes through their heads, if anything.)
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists that is why they invented hell. Bertrand Russell
#251
Posted 2013-October-22, 14:53
PassedOut, on 2013-October-22, 13:21, said:
That's too bad because it's now covered by healthcare.
#252
Posted 2013-October-22, 18:20
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#253
Posted 2013-October-22, 18:32
blackshoe, on 2013-October-22, 18:20, said:
Nothing wrong with a little vulgarity now and then
#254
Posted 2013-October-22, 19:50
Quote
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#255
Posted 2013-October-22, 21:37
Of course. Can't ever have enough bureaucrats, can we?
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#256
Posted 2013-October-23, 06:31
Quote
The reason you need to add a guy like Jeffrey Zients is you need someone on the project who is old enough to have read and understood what Brooks and others learned on that project.
#257
Posted 2013-October-23, 07:19
a. He acknowledges that there is a substantial problem.
b. He examines how this came about.
c. He proposes how to fix it.
This is good.
Of course there will be glitches, of course there will be some issues that are quite thorny. But I, and I expect most people, like to see something along the lines of a., b. and c. above when this occurs.
Advances in medical care have been truly astounding in the last couple of decades. When I was young my interests were primarily mathematics and physics. If I were young today, I think I would look at mathematics (some things never change) and biology/medicine. These changes require a changes in the structure. I had pneumonia in 1945 or so. Dr. Setzer, our family doc, came out, prescribed some medicine, told me to stay in bed, and then we all hoped for the best. Yes it worked out but I imagine mothers today appreciate the greater hope provided by medical advances.
My health has been good, mostly, so my experience is limited. But I did have some bureaucratic issues with Medicare a while back. But I have had similar issues with insurance companies. The medical world, and the world in general, has simply become more complex.
Despite, or maybe because of, all of the complexity it is very important to me that I have a substantial say in my medical treatment. This gets tricky. It's tricky with Medicare, it will be tricky with Obamacare, but it would also be tricky with neither program in place. We need the most talented people we can find at the helm, and we need transparency (often claimed, seldom provided) and scrutiny. The Emmanuel article fits right into my thinking on this.
#258
Posted 2013-October-23, 08:25
Sebelius and Zients are probably on there way over to kenberg's house now.
#259
Posted 2013-October-23, 10:07
kenberg, on 2013-October-22, 13:13, said:
I wonder if they might have done that if the launch hadn't coincided with the government shutdown. They may have put on rose-colored glasses and hoped that it would go well enough to provide a political win. Unfortunately, it didn't -- so the Republicans looked bad for shutting down the government, and the Decocrats got egg on their faces for launching a broken site.
When the site first launched, and there were reports of it failing, they were claiming that it just couldn't handle the load. That happens -- apparently they expected X number of people to to try it right away, and there were several times that many.
But reports I've heard since then indicate that it's much more than just an overload problem, there's also lots of incomplete or incorrect data. E.g. sometimes a spouse will be reported to the insurance company as a child.
http://www.newser.co...es-as-kids.html
The Daily Show mentioned that less than 10% of people who have attempted to enroll have been successful.
#260
Posted 2013-October-23, 10:12
PassedOut, on 2013-October-22, 13:38, said:
You're kidding, right?
Corporations have incentive to get things right -- if their services don't work, they lose money and can go out of business. Governments don't have much to lose.
I may be a Democrat, but I still know that private industry is usually more efficient and productive than the public sector. There are just some services that are hard for private businesses to provide (there's no profit in fire-fighting or welfare, for instance), and we need governments to do them.