3 random 20-year-old dudes build fully functional ObamaCare web site in a few days

DEAD7

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3 random 20-year-old dudes build fully functional ObamaCare web site in a few days

"Doug Gross writes at CNN that spurred by the problems that have surrounded the rollout of the official HeathCare.gov website, three 20-year-old programmers in San Francisco have created an alternative website to help people get health insurance under the Affordable Care Act quickly and cheaply. The result is a bare-bones site called Health Sherpa, which lets users enter their zip code, plus details about their family and income, to find suggested plans in their area. 'We were surprised to see that it was actually fairly difficult to use HealthCare.gov to find and understand our options,' says George Kalogeropoulos, who created the site along with Ning Liang and Michael Wasser. 'Given that the data was publicly available, we thought that it made a lot of sense to take the data that was on there and just make it easy to search through and view available plans.' Of course, it's not fair to compare the creation of Health Sherpa to the rollout of the more complicated government ACA site, which even President Obama has acknowledged as a horribly botched affair. 'It isn't a fair apples-to-apples comparison,' says Kalogeropoulos. 'Unlike Healthcare.gov, our site doesn't connect to the IRS, DHS, and various state exchanges and authorities. Furthermore, we're using the government's data, so our site is only possible because of the hard work that the Healthcare.gov team has done.' But it does cast light on the difference between what can be done by a small group of experts, steeped in Silicon Valley's anything-is-possible mentality, and a massive government project in which politics and bureaucracy seem to have helped create an unwieldy mess. The three programmers have continued fine-tuning the site as its popularity has grown. In less than a week, the site has had almost 200,000 unique visitors and over half a million page views. '"The Health Sherpa makes it ridiculously easy for anyone to compare health care plans covered under Obamacare in 34 states," writes Connor Simpson at Atlantic Wire. "The result is a simple, beautiful, remarkably responsive website that anyone could use.'"
 

unit321

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Well, that's nice. Not really shocked.
There are probably contractors working on the ACA website who are :wtf: knowing they've charged the gov't millions in development costs.
 

Propaganda

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3 random 20-year-old dudes build fully functional ObamaCare web site in a few days

"Doug Gross writes at CNN that spurred by the problems that have surrounded the rollout of the official HeathCare.gov website, three 20-year-old programmers in San Francisco have created an alternative website to help people get health insurance under the Affordable Care Act quickly and cheaply. The result is a bare-bones site called Health Sherpa, which lets users enter their zip code, plus details about their family and income, to find suggested plans in their area. 'We were surprised to see that it was actually fairly difficult to use HealthCare.gov to find and understand our options,' says George Kalogeropoulos, who created the site along with Ning Liang and Michael Wasser. 'Given that the data was publicly available, we thought that it made a lot of sense to take the data that was on there and just make it easy to search through and view available plans.' Of course, it's not fair to compare the creation of Health Sherpa to the rollout of the more complicated government ACA site, which even President Obama has acknowledged as a horribly botched affair. 'It isn't a fair apples-to-apples comparison,' says Kalogeropoulos. 'Unlike Healthcare.gov, our site doesn't connect to the IRS, DHS, and various state exchanges and authorities. Furthermore, we're using the government's data, so our site is only possible because of the hard work that the Healthcare.gov team has done.' But it does cast light on the difference between what can be done by a small group of experts, steeped in Silicon Valley's anything-is-possible mentality, and a massive government project in which politics and bureaucracy seem to have helped create an unwieldy mess. The three programmers have continued fine-tuning the site as its popularity has grown. In less than a week, the site has had almost 200,000 unique visitors and over half a million page views. '"The Health Sherpa makes it ridiculously easy for anyone to compare health care plans covered under Obamacare in 34 states," writes Connor Simpson at Atlantic Wire. "The result is a simple, beautiful, remarkably responsive website that anyone could use.'"

let's not get carried away here.
 

The Real

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Govt. stays losing :wow:

Eh, not so sure about that. Problems with the original website aside, this one is entirely parasitic upon it while also taking on much less load, since it's not connected to the other, massive websites with which the original is embedded. This is actually a good analogy for a lot of alleged "innovation" cited by market romantics.
 

Meta Reign

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Yea, I was going to post this as a thread to go along with my whole Obamacare bashing campaign, but I don't want to post anything that implies that Obamacare needs to be "fixed". Only things that shows that it needs to be scraped completely, and politicians literally hung in the streets for this treason along with many others.

Great story nonetheless though.:ehh:
 

Blackking

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This site isn't going to have the traffic..... and doesn't connect to DHS... lol, AKA one of the most important things. or IRS.

But it does work ... and this really is how shyt should be done. It's sad that we can 100% guarantee the gov spent millions on wack ass developers and people and old gov employees and contractors to make a site that didn't work. With 1/4 the budget they could have got more 20 year olds and 10 year 30 years olds to manager and had a working site and program.

Anyone who's worked for the gov knows that from infrastructure to software the gov is like 10 years behind on shyt that isn't meant to kill someone.


there are 14 year olds in china right now that could shut our shyt down..... we need to step our game up and get rid of old financial and development processes.
 

Data-Hawk

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Government incompetence is nothing new. Federal government IT is the worst ever...I have been there trust me.

Ask @Data-Hawk


Heh... I don't work for the government ...........:ninja2:...........But I did do some contract work for them a few yrs back and they love to throw money away....damn shame
 

Data-Hawk

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O, for the topic of the thread. I never read up on what caused the site to malfunction, I can guess though:

- Crazy deadlines
- Feature creep( they never knew when to cut off adding new features )
- Not enough testing and/or some new requirement was added at the last minute
- They may have simulated in one type of environment and when the site went live they added different pieces in.
- Managers/leads who probably never wrote a line of code in their life...lol
 

DEAD7

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O, for the topic of the thread. I never read up on what caused the site to malfunction, I can guess though:

- Crazy deadlines
- Feature creep( they never knew when to cut off adding new features )
- Not enough testing and/or some new requirement was added at the last minute
- They may have simulated in one type of environment and when the site went live they added different pieces in.
- Managers/leads who probably never wrote a line of code in their life...lol
:russ:
 
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