Checkmite
Skepticifimisticalationist
Obamacare, Day 7. Any doctors or hospitals had to call Washington DC for instructions on a course of treatment yet?
Obamacare, Day 7. Any doctors or hospitals had to call Washington DC for instructions on a course of treatment yet?
No. All the nurses were fired, all the doctors quit, and all the hospitals closed.
An explanation for the password length restriction is they're storing the passwords in plain text in the database. That is a plateful of wrong served up with a side order of wrong. The proper way to do it is to hash the passwords with a strong hashing algorithm (e.g. SHA-128) and a long salt, and store the hash and the salt in the database.
Still not working for me.Yup, and as feedback from various code-monkeys rolls in, I have no doubt that the system will be improved. In fact, this weekend I peeked in on healthcare.gov, and I saw that they were doing maintenance. Translation: they are fixing/upgrading the system already.
Still not working for me.
Me either. My impatience is growing but I am sure they will sort it out.
The website is just a vehicle for information and not the service we will be buying.
Ever tried playing an online videogame the first week of launch?Oddly enough, sites like Facebook, Amazon, and Google regularly handle crushing loads. I have yet to hear one of those sites going down and then blaming user traffic.
Ever tried playing an online videogame the first week of launch?
No, but it's not particularly relevant. There is a huge difference between a website and an online video game.
They're also far more complex. This is a simple registration procedure that is failing.Yes, online video games usually have a lot more money and resources behind them than a governmental website.
No. All the nurses were fired, all the doctors quit, and all the hospitals closed.

Still not working for me.
... Technology experts say the problems are probably due to a combination of factors: unexpectedly high demand, as well as possible software flaws and shortcomings in design. Sometimes a high volume of users can expose software problems that went undetected in testing, they said. ...
... Problems caused by website overload should ease as more equipment is added. Software and design flaws are trickier to fix, meaning more overnight repairs. ...
... Now a health policy expert with the nonpartisan Brookings Institution, McClellan says the message for consumers is, "take a deep breath. If you are interested in this program, you do not need to make a decision this week, or even this month. You should make a decision by November. ...
They're also far more complex. This is a simple registration procedure that is failing.
You'll never know.
As a software professional for 30 years, here's a dirty little secret: Most software sucks. Software done for the government is often especially bad because they either hire the wrong people, over and over, or they do it in-house with nowhere near the resources required to do it correctly.
Can you explain the logical and physical data flow of this specific registration process and what leads you to decide the registration should be faster?They're also far more complex. This is a simple registration procedure that is failing.