This being December 1, I guess we should at least pause to look at what has been accomplished. I think the best answer is that we don't really know, but it sounds incomplete. A link to a Post article that mostly just gives out what the government is claiming:
http://www.washingto...src=al_national
We see:
Quote
As a result of the improvements: the average system response time is under 1 second; the error rate is "consistently well below 1 percent"; the online system is stable — not crashing — more than 90 percent of the time; as many as 50,000 shoppers can use the site at the same time, or up to 800,000 visits a day.
OK, so if these 800,00 users hit the site and it works as claimed, fewer than 8.000 will experience errors. Well, it's something.
We hear from somene who gave it a try:
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Even on Saturday, some shoppers who tried enrolling hours after a key upgrade was supposed to have been completed, said they were unable to complete the process.
"I only made it half way through the second section," said Liz Gallops, an insurance broker in Winston-Salem, N.C., who has tried several times to see what kind of options are available for herself, husband and daughter. "I entered my dependents but the system continued to ask me who my dependents were and would only let me add new, not claim the ones I had already entered."
The article finishes with
Quote
Dec. 23 is the deadline to sign up for coverage effective Jan. 1. In anticipation of high volume in the next three weeks, administration officials said they have set up a system to help consumers if they can't immediately get access to the site during times of peak demand. Shoppers the site cannot accommodate will be placed in an online queue. They can ask to be e-mailed when HealthCare.gov can handle more visitors.
This is the administration speaking, touting their success! I suppose they learned something by the earlier embarrassment of rolling something out as working when it was not at all working.
There are websites that I use, and websites that I avoid. I am very pleased that as a medicare participant I have no obligation to use this one. Sometimes, with patience and maybe a little cleverness, I can cope with a badly designed website. But I do this only if I have to. Given any choice at all, I expect that many people will avoid this website. Not ideology, just good sense.