hang on Minnesota...just one more day until paradise begins!
(unless you’re an American indian.)
Wonderful!
BO and his university clones have never run anything but their mouths. This gargantuan project is so far above their expertise that it will be a windfall for every con-artist and crook that has a computer.
I’ve heard that the Connecticut Exchange is so messed up that it’s assigning already-used social security numbers to some people just because they might have been born in Hawaii.
I hear this morning the CO system is down too.
John Gall’s comment from The Systems Bible, about how big complex systems built from scratch will always fail while the ones that evolve from simple systems will usually work comes to mind.
The version in Texas doesn’t work. It hangs up on the security questions page.
It’s a typical government program: lots of promise, expensive, disappointing in delivery of benefits, and fraught with unintended consequences.
Healthcare.gov is basically dead in the water; required menus have quit disappeared and you get stuck in an infinite loop just try to create an acoount, as mandated by his excellency Hussein 0bama.
It makes so much sense for the feral government to take over 18% of the US economy.
Isn’t it standard procedure to have a beta version, test it out on a small scale first?
Maybe they should have spent some of the promotion dollars on the programmers?
Online adventures with Obamacare: Reps admit known security bug, but please be patient, guys
Clinton had snafus
Obamatollah has glitches
If they can’t even get a website up and running, how are they going to manage health care for millions of people?
This is fun. I’m enjoying the show.
Privacy policy of healthcare.gov
Types of information we collect
When you browse through any website, certain information about your visit can be collected. We automatically collect and temporarily store the following types of information about your visit:
Domain from which you access the InternetIP address (an IP or internet protocol address is a number that is automatically given to a computer connected to the Web)
Operating system on your computer and information about the browser you used when visiting the site
Date and time of your visit
Pages you visited
Address of the website that connected you to HealthCare.gov (such as google.com or bing.com)
We use this information to measure the number of visitors to our site and its various sections and to help make our site more useful to visitors.