Brandon wrote: We've got a popular government program with website problem.
Would this be "popular" as in mandated by govt. and carrying a punishment if not complied with?
Like the Soviet gulag labor camps were a popular form of recreation?
Brandon wrote: You might remember this from just before you inexplicably decided to post your resume:
We've got a popular government program with website problems.
These problems are so obvious that people like WindPeak and Walter Newton can spot them.
There are unemployed computer programmers looking for work.
And your prediction is that these website problems will never get solved?
Now you're putting words in my mouth. Where did I predict anything? You can't debate the subject with any knowledge so you are going to continue to deflect and try to change the subject.
You tell me why this ACA website is not riddled with a crappy front end, crappy middle middle ware and now according to the article I just posted above problems with the Oracle database?
I already gave you all my thoughts. Prove me wrong. You can't.
Your thoughts are irrelevant to the problem. Other people will solve it while you use one hand to pat yourself on the back and the other to wag your weenie.
Brandon wrote: Your thoughts are irrelevant to the problem. Other people will solve it while you use one hand to pat yourself on the back and the other to wag your weenie.
You can't answer my questions... all you got it smart-assed tripe.
Walter L Newton wrote: Neither the web portal nor the database is working properly for most people.
Coordination between them appears to have been nonexistent, or else front-end architect Development Seed never would have given this interview to the Atlantic a few months back, in which they embrace open-source and envision a new world of government agencies sharing code {ie: software} with one another. (It didn’t work out, apparently.)
Walter L Newton wrote: The ACA website is using standard HTML and CSS for the page design (just use "show source" in your browser to see the actual page coding) , Javascript plugins and functions on the client side (the user) and the back end (database) is an Oracle database (Oracle is the Federal government standard for their databases).
If any part of the web of systems fails to work properly, it could lead to a traffic jam blocking most users from the marketplace. That’s just what happened: On Oct. 2, officials identified a bottleneck where those systems intersect at a software component sold by Oracle Corp. that still hasn’t been cleared.
Brandon wrote: Your thoughts are irrelevant to the problem.
My thoughts have been spot on.
Brandon wrote: Other people will solve it while you use one hand to pat yourself on the back and the other to wag your weenie.
You've managed to interrupt this thread twice, having your snide comments like that stripped off and banished to the Ring.
If you knew what you were talking about and actually had something meaningful to say on this topic your comments wouldn't have been placed in forum hell.
(There must be a club somewhere where Pinecam's Maverick, Tom M and Wayne hangout. Of course we have are own little club of trolls like Vl, Dougy and Baby Fat and Lady Jazzer... now wait... that's just two trolls... Pinecam wins)