Monday, October 21, 2013

Lowest Bidder And O'BamaCare

This is kind of cool.

The other day I mentioned that the ObamaCare website would have been built by the lowest bidder.

Now this, from the president's press secretary:

October 22, 2013: Karl then asked Carney about the main contractor that built the website, CGI, and why they were hired after being fired by a provincial health agency of Ontario, Canada. Carney again refused to answer, referring him to Health and Human Services.

From Consumer Reports:
Consumer Reports, which publishes reviews of consumer products and services, advised its readers to avoid the federal health-care exchange “for at least another month if you can.” “Hopefully that will be long enough for its software vendors to clean up the mess they’ve made,” the magazine said, having tested the site themselves over the course of the past three weeks.
Noting that only 271,000 of the 9.47 million people who tried signing up in the first week managed to create an account, Consumer Reports then provided a few tips to those attempting to slog through the application process. From attempting successive logins because “error messages . . . may not always match reality” to checking one’s inbox frequently because missing an e-mail a user will be timed out of the site and forced to start from square one, none of the suggestions guaranteed success.
The magazine has also released a string of scathing reviews. On October 1, the day the Obamacare exchanges went online, the magazine told people to be patient: “Don’t worry if you can’t sign up today or even within the next couple of weeks.” A week into enrollment, they urged again to “wait a couple weeks and hope that the site irons out its many problems” because the HealthCare.gov is “barely operational.”

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