There will be hell to pay soon, as Sebelius testifies before the House of Representatives next week. She will have facts, explanations, and excuses galore but none of that will ameliorate the fact that in the months and weeks before October 1st she was quoted, multiple times, saying that "all was ready." And the media was still asleep at the switch, or punch drunk with admiration for the President, because there was not one inkling that problems were endemic until the utter failure of the web portal.
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| The only unrealistic people related to Obamacare are the Obama Administration and the Mainstream Media |
But now it appears they are suffering from tremendous naivete as well. With damaged credibility and tremendous doubt sown, even in the mainstream media, now would be the time to be 100% truthful. It is also the time to NOT speak like a politician but with the sincerity of someone who promised Americans "the most transparent Administration in history."
But such is not happening, as revealed by the President's claim to have the "best and the brightest on the job," with blandishments to have all problems fixed shortly.
As someone who has managed countless software programs in his lifetime, I can say categorically that small software problems can take as long to correct as the time to code the original software; or, put another way, a 95% working complicated computer program that required a year to code can require another year to fix.
And piling on more tech experts does not hasten the task. Nine women cannot produce a baby in one month, and tripling-down on the tech experts will not produce working software in 1/3 the time.
While the Administration's critics say that the Obama Administration had three years to do this right, the honest critiques note that CGI, the software provider, had less than one year to write the code.
Rushing software code, without software system engineering, incremental software test, and 100% vetting prior to release brings to mind that old adage from fathers to sons:
"Marry in haste, repent in leisure."
Or, for those poor saps in the Obama Adminstration who are tearing their hair out:
"Code in haste, suffer the outrage in leisure."
I leave this post with one of the funniest Dilbert cartoons ever about motivating software engineers, not known as the most obedient of employees:


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