Saturday, October 12, 2013

Quixotic Queries Question Quality!

A busy screen is shown on the laptop of a Certified Application Counselor as he attempted to enroll an interested person for Affordable Care Act insurance, known as Obamacare, at the Borinquen Medical Center in Miami, Florida October 2, 2013.
The frequently encountered "too busy" screen at healthcare.gov.

Photo by Joe Skipper/Reuters








At healthcare.gov, many people are still unable to create accounts, choose from a list of health care plans, and sign up for one. The system is down, or overloaded, or shows perplexing errors. Is the ongoing plight of healthcare.gov down to “crashing servers,” as many have assumed? Perhaps. But a server isn’t just a battery—you can’t just add more until you’ve got enough power. A peek at the architecture of healthcare.gov reveals a vast entourage of many different servers old and new, any one of which could have its own unique crashing problem, as well as a mysterious “data hub” that was responsible for connecting them all together—and thus if one failed, they all failed.














To fix healthcare.gov’s woes, you’d have to look at each kind of server individually and see how it failed, like checking Christmas tree lights to find the one bad bulb. All you need to do is replace the right bulb, but you don’t know which one that is. It’s not necessarily a hugely difficult process, and it doesn’t imply fundamental problems with the system, but it can be tedious and time-consuming. And if every single bulb on the string is owned and operated by a different government contractor or agency who isn’t used to sharing the details of its unique bulb housing and management with anyone else, it’s going to take even longer.










If I were to bid on the whole project, I would need more lawyers and more proposal writers than actual engineers.










I was, it seems, a bit naive in thinking there were merely two cooks (or two bulb managers) in the kitchen behind healthcare.gov. The number of players is considerably larger than just front-end architects Development Seed and back-end developers CGI Federal, although the government is saying very little about who’s responsible. The Department of Health and Human Services’ Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), which issued the contracts, is keeping mum, referring reporters to the labyrinthine USASpending.gov for information about contractors. (I was not able to obtain any useful information from that site, though it does make healthcare.gov look pretty good in comparison.)












By digging through GAO reports, however, I’ve picked out a handful of key players. One is Booz Allen, the people who brought you Edward Snowden. Despite getting $6 million for “Exchange IT integration support,” they now claim that they “did no IT work themselves.” Maybe Snowden can help us out on this one, though as far as I can tell, Booz Allen does seem to be ancillary to the overall healthcare.gov project.










Then there’s CGI Federal, of course, who got the largest set of contracts, worth $88 million, for “FFE information technology and healthcare.gov,” as well as doing nine state exchanges. Their spokesperson’s statement is a model of buck-passing: “We are spending 24 hours a day, seven days a week working with our client and working with our partners in order to stabilize the enrollment [process] and finish the roll-out of this very complex project.”










But which partners? The most interesting is Quality Software Solutions Inc. (QSSI). Despite the laughable name and inexplicable slogans such as “Quality is a Q word”—hard to argue with, I guess—they’ve been doing health care IT since 1997, and got $55 million for healthcare.gov’s data hub in contracts finalized in January 2012. But then UnitedHealth Group purchased QSSI in September 2012, raising eyebrows about conflicts of interest.










In Congressional testimony on Sept. 10, QSSI vice president Michael Finkel said that there was no need to be worried about the conflict of interest—but he also revealed more about the architecture of healthcare.gov and the data hub than anyone else has in the last week. Finkel described the data hub as the ultimate middleman of the entire system, “funneling” queries to databases from multiple sources. This would not be an impossible task, but it would require a formidable level of technical coordination. Imagine if Google, Apple, and Microsoft were suddenly asked to develop a website together.










Finkel described the data hub as the master switchboard for the entire sign-up and registration process. By integrating with “external information sources, such as government databases,” it would 1) verify a consumer’s data, including citizenship and identity, and 2) issue queries to these various databases as needed to “verify applicant information data [and] determine eligibility for qualified health plans.” The data hub did not have any of this information itself, nor did users use it directly. Rather, the hub acted as the intermediary between the healthcare.gov website, where consumers would input their information, and a variety of other databases containing consumer and health insurance information, coordinating between them. QSSI “developed” the data hub for CMS and was responsible for “ensuring proper system performance, including maintenance.”










The government has repeatedly claimed that various problems of healthcare.gov are due to server overload—too many people attempting to sign up. The data hub would certainly be ground zero for such load issues, but not the only one. If any of the other databases it spoke to were overloaded, the sign-up process would break anyway. The conundrum may not even be in the data hub or in healthcare.gov, but in some pre-existing citizenship database that’s never had to cope with the massive crush of queries from the hub.










The fundamental fault is in the failure of coordination between the two systems, the failure to test from end to end, and—to use a term of art in software engineering—the failure to handle failure gracefully. To the extent that the data hub was the nexus for integrating many systems (including the healthcare.gov front end), “systems integrator” QSSI had the responsibility to work out graceful failure conditions with all of their partners and a comprehensible user experience in such cases—something that clearly wasn’t done. This points to bad management, lack of accountability, and a broken contractor procurement process.










Development Seed President Eric Gundersen oversaw the part of healthcare.gov that did survive last week: the static front-end Web pages that had nothing to do with the hub. Development Seed was only able to do the work after being hired by contractor Aquilent, who navigated the bureaucracy of government procurement. “If I were to bid on the whole project,” Gundersen told me, “I would need more lawyers and more proposal writers than actual engineers to build the project. Why would I make a company like that?” These convolutions are exactly what prevented the brilliant techies of Obama’s re-election campaign from being involved with the development of healthcare.gov. To get the opportunity to work on arguably the most pivotal website launch in American history, a smart young programmer would have to work for a company mired in bureaucracy and procurement regulations, with a website that looks like it’s from 10 years ago. So much for the efficiency of privatization.










 “The problem here is nobody knows what happened, and that’s not acceptable,” said Gundersen, who added that he had no contact whatsoever with CGI Federal or QSSI. Gundersen is a strong advocate of open-source processes as a way to increase civic involvement with important government projects. He wasn’t certain why the open sourcing efforts, which he and HHS Chief Technology Officer Bryan Sivak embraced, seemed to have utterly stalled after Development Seed turned over their work in June. Sivak has been absent from public discussion and Twitter since last week, though he proposed an SXSW panel last month on “disrupting government.” I bet he knows where the digital bodies are buried. He assumed his post in mid-2012, long after the contracts had been handed out, so I imagine he is about the most frustrated CTO on the planet right now. There’s no way Sivak could have stopped the cronyism, though. Companies like CGI Federal and QSSI are locked in for years on end, regardless of their performance.










Gundersen, who spoke openly about his experience, was scathing toward the procurement process. “If people don’t see the need for procurement reform after this,” he said, “we’re in trouble.”








Source: http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/bitwise/2013/10/problems_with_healthcare_gov_cronyism_bad_management_and_too_many_cooks.html
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Thursday, October 10, 2013

Heavy Rotation: 10 Songs Public Radio Can't Stop Playing





Bill Callahan's "Small Plane" is a favorite of World Cafe host David Dye.



Hanly Banks/Courtesy of the artist


Bill Callahan's "Small Plane" is a favorite of World Cafe host David Dye.


Hanly Banks/Courtesy of the artist


It's time to share what 10 of our favorite public radio personalities have been loving lately. Here's a list of this month's Heavy Rotation panelists:



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Thursday, August 1, 2013

Te?o realizing that ?little things? make NFL different from college

Manti Te'oAP

Chargers linebacker Manti Te?o has learned plenty in the past year.? When it comes to the NFL, he?s learned plenty in the past week.

Through his first five training-camp practices with the Chargers, the second-round pick has begun to figure out that the ?little things? make the difference between the pro game and the lower levels of the sport.

?The running backs have vision,? Te?o said, via Tom Krasovic of U-T San Diego.? ?You tell the running back to run to the right, he?ll run to the right, but if the hole is not there, he will bounce.? You have your good running backs in college.? Everybody here came from college.? The best of the best is here.?

Te?o learned that lesson when he thought he had running back Ryan Mathews tracked down in the backfield.? Until Mathews unexpectedly cut and sped away from Te?o.

The former Notre Dame standout also has learned quickly from tight end Antonio Gates the difficulty of covering NFL-caliber wideouts.

?With a lot of guys, you can kind of tell what they?re going to do,? Te?o said.? ?With Gates, you can?t.? I think that?s the biggest difference between college and the pros.? In college, you can, for the lack of a better word, you can cheat a little, you can predict what people are going to do before they do it.?

To help him react to what players on offense do, T?eo is 16 pounds lighter than his top weight in college.? While that may make it harder for him to dish out and take physical poundings, the modern NFL places a much greater premium on linebackers covering receivers.

The linebackers who can?t will be off the field on third downs.? For Te?o that could be the difference between perceived success and failure in the NFL.

Source: http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2013/07/31/teo-realizing-that-little-things-make-nfl-different-from-college/

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Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Twitter Looks to Simplify Abuse Reporting After Rape Threats


The general manager for Twitter in the U.K. has promised to simplify the process for reporting abusive tweets after a freelance journalist, broadcaster, and feminist campaigner reported numerous rape threats on the micro-blogging service.

"We're testing ways to simplify reporting, e.g. within a Tweet by using the 'Report Tweet' button in our iPhone app and on mobile Web," Twitter's Tony Wang tweeted this weekend.

Wang's comment came after Caroline Criado-Perez received a barrage of threats on Twitter following a successful campaign to have author Jane Austen featured on the 10 pound note. A Change.org petition then asked Twitter to revamp its reporting system, which "is below required standards," the petition said.

On Saturday, Criado-Perez pinged Twitter's head of safety to say she was "reaching the end of my third day of rape threats. What is twitter doing about this?" That prompted a response from Twitter, including Wang.

The threats ranged from messages that said "can I rape you?" to those that said "I will find you," and beyond. As Sky News reported, a 21-year-old man was arrested for the threats he made against Criado-Perez.

It appears that many of the accounts that made the threats against Criado-Perez have been suspended. "We will suspend accounts that, once reported to us, are found to be in breach of our rules," Wang tweeted. But the process for reporting abusive tweets is still a bit cumbersome.

On iOS, there is a "Report tweet" option via the "..." button, which allows users to flag a tweet as spam, compromised, or abusive, or to block a user. But those who select abusive must complete a form. On Twitter.com, users can select "Flag Media," which tells Twitter to review that tweet, but from the timeline, the "..." button only gives users the option to share via email or embed the tweet. If you click through to someone's full profile, and click the person icon, there's the option to block or report someone for spam, but not abusive behavior. For that you have to go to the abusive user form.

Criado-Perez stressed that she does not want to stifle free speech, pointing to a tweet that, while lewd, is not threatening and should be allowed. "I am fighting against those" that would be considered a violation of the U.K.'s harassment laws, she said.

Source: http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2422387,00.asp?kc=PCRSS05079TX1K0000993

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Friday, July 26, 2013

Tangled Cables #7: Google Fun Bombs, PC Versus Console Gaming, And Samsung Domination

Welcome back to Tangled Cables, the weekly show where we discuss the best in PC hardware, gadgets, and gaming. In this installment, we take a deep dive into Google Google?s new Nexus 7, Chromecast, and Android 4.3 announcements.

Later, the conversation steers into debate territory as we finally breach the heated subject of PC versus console gaming, with some doubt cast in the direction of mobile gaming for good measure.

Plus, we offer up first impressions of the Carl Zeiss Cinemizer, discuss the pros and cons of video capture cards, and even save time to answer a trio of listener questions.

All this and more on this week?s edition of the Tangled Cables Podcast.

Source: http://www.forbes.com/sites/jasonevangelho/2013/07/25/tangled-cables-7-google-fun-bombs-pc-versus-console-gaming-and-samsung-domination/

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Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Ousted Egyptian leader's family denounces military

CAIRO (AP) ? The family of ousted President Mohammed Morsi furiously denounced the military Monday, accusing it of "kidnapping" him, and European diplomats urged that Egypt's first freely elected leader be released after being held incommunicado for nearly three weeks since being deposed by the army.

The fate of Morsi, who has been held without charge, has become a focus of the political battle between his Muslim Brotherhood and the new military-backed government.

The Brotherhood has tried to use Morsi's detention to rally the country to its side, hoping to restore its badly damaged popularity. The interim government, in turn, appears in part to be using it to pressure his supporters into backing down from their protests demanding his reinstatement.

Those protests again turned violent Monday, with clashes breaking out between Morsi supporters and opponents near Cairo's Tahrir Square, and between pro-Morsi demonstrators and police in a city on the capital's northern edge. At least four people were killed.

So far, however, the outcry over Morsi's detention seems to have gained little traction beyond the president's supporters, without bringing significantly greater numbers to its ongoing rallies around the country.

Millions of Egyptians filled the streets starting June 30, demanding the president's removal after a year in office and leading to the coup that ousted him. Anti-Brotherhood sentiment remains strong, further fueled by protests that block traffic in congested city centers and by media that have kept a staunchly anti-Morsi line. Egyptian human rights groups have said he should either be freed or charged.

Behind-the-scenes talks have been taking place through mediators between Brotherhood figures and the interim government ? centered around releasing Morsi and other detained leaders of the group in return for an end to protests by his supporters, according to Mohammed Aboul-Ghar, head of a liberal political party that backed the president's overthrow.

The military fears that Morsi's release "would only increase protests and make them more aggressive," he told The Associated Press. At least five other prominent Brotherhood members have also been detained. The military also has said that there is no way the measures taken against Morsi will be reversed.

The Brotherhood so far seems unlikely to make a deal, saying it cannot accept a military coup. It and other Morsi supporters vow they will not stop protests until he is returned to office, and they have said there will be no negotiations with the new leadership unless it accepts his reinstatement. They have denied any back-channel talks are taking place.

In a toughly worded statement Monday, the Brotherhood laid out a plan for resolving the crisis that was little changed from what Morsi proposed in his final days in office. It said Morsi must first be reinstated along with the now-dissolved upper house of parliament and the suspended constitution, followed by new parliament elections that would start a process for amending the constitution, and then a "national dialogue" could be held.

It denounced those behind Morsi's ouster as "putschists" and accused "coup commanders, with foreign support" of overthrowing "all the hopes in a democratic system."

Interim President Adly Mansour repeated calls for reconciliation in a nationally televised speech Monday evening. "We ... want to turn a new page in the nation's book," he said. "No contempt, no hatred, no divisions and no collisions."

Morsi was detained July 3, when Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, the army chief, announced his removal. He is held at an undisclosed location and has had no contact with family or supporters. Government officials have said only that he is safe, is well-cared for and is being held for his own protection.

Two of Morsi's children lashed out at the military over his detention, saying his family has not been permitted to see him since then.

"What happened is a crime of kidnapping," one of his sons, Osama, told a Cairo news conference. "I can't find any legal means to have access to him."

The younger Morsi, who is a lawyer, called his father's detention the "embodiment of the abduction of popular will and a whole nation," and said the family will "take all legal actions" to end his detention.

In a statement read by Morsi's daughter, Shaimaa, the family said it held "the leaders of the bloody military coup fully responsible for the safety and security of the president."

European Union foreign ministers called for the release of Morsi and "all political detainees," saying it was among their key priorities for Egypt's new leadership.

The United States has stopped short of calling for his release. The White House repeated its call Monday for the end of politicized arrests and detentions. But spokesman Jay Carney said of Morsi: "We believe his situation needs to be resolved in a way that is consistent with the rule of law and due process and allows for his personal security."

"This is an issue that goes beyond one individual," he said, adding that resolving Morsi's situation wouldn't end the broader conflict in Egypt.

Prosecutors have said they are investigating allegations that Morsi and Brotherhood officials conspired with the Palestinian militant group Hamas to carry out a 2011 attack on prisons that freed Morsi and other Brotherhood leaders from jail during the 18-day uprising against autocrat Hosni Mubarak.

However, the prosecutors have not formally ordered Morsi detained for investigation, meaning his detention effectively remains outside the legal system.

Prominent rights activist Hossam Bahgat said a coalition of rights groups are preparing a joint call for Morsi to be indicted over the deaths of dozens of Egyptians in street riots and protests under his rule.

More than 40 people were killed in January in clashes with security forces. A month earlier, 10 others were killed when supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood clamped down on anti-Morsi protesters staging a sit-in in front of the presidential palace. Several activists, arrested in street protests, were killed during torture.

But Bahgat noted that charges on those deaths would put the new leadership in a difficult position because it would also require indicting the current interior minister, in charge of police, who held the post under Morsi as well.

Instead, authorities are turning to "more politicized cases," said Bahgat, director of the Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights. "All what is circulating now is more of a fiction than real."

"Now he is being held hostage to political negotiations and it depends on the deal, his fate will be decided."

Morsi's supporters have been holding protests and street marches nearly every day in Cairo in addition to sit-ins that have gone on for weeks in several cities. The marches have repeatedly turned violent, with dozens of mostly Morsi supporters killed.

Abdel-Sattar el-Meligi, a prominent former Brotherhood figure, said the group is hoping that protests can rally wider popular support. So far, however, "these are just very desperate attempts," he said.

"The Brotherhood failed to estimate the real anger in the street, the political weight of their opponents," he said. "The Brotherhood has exhausted all their credit in all levels."

On Monday, Essam el-Erian, deputy head of the Brotherhood's political party, urged protesters to "besiege" the U.S. Embassy and expel the ambassador, stepping up the group's accusations that Washington backed the coup. Morsi's opponents, in turn, accuse the U.S. of supporting his presidency.

Several hundred Islamists tried to march toward the U.S. Embassy hours later, passing near Tahrir Square, where Morsi opponents have been camped. Rock-throwing clashes erupted between the two sides, and gunshots were heard, though it was not clear who opened fire. Both sides were seen to have what appeared to be homemade pistols.

One Morsi opponent was killed and dozens of others wounded, some by birdshot and two by live ammunition, said George Ihab, a doctor at a field clinic set up by the anti-Morsi camp.

Several anti-Morsi demonstrators said the ousted president's supporters attacked their people guarding an entrance to Tahrir near a bridge over the Nile River.

"They attacked us from Qasr el-Nil Bridge with birdshot and live ammunition and molotovs," said Ahmed Korashi, whose hand was burned from what he said was a firebomb.

In a tweet, the Muslim Brotherhood denied its supporters attacked, saying its protests are peaceful.

Clashes also broke out in Qalioub, north of Cairo, when pro-Morsi protesters blocked a highway between the capital and the Mediterranean coastal city of Alexandria, security officials said. The security forces demanded the road be cleared, and protesters fired ammunition in the air. Clashes erupted with protesters throwing stones and security forces firing tear gas.

At least three people were killed, including a 15-year-old and an 18-year-old who died of gunshot wounds, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to the press.

Security officials said the body of a 33-year-old textile worker, Amr Magdy Samak, was found near the sit-in with signs of torture. His body had bruises and his nails had been torn off, the officials said, adding that the death was under investigation.

In the Sinai Peninsula, suspected Islamic militants attacked security checkpoints in the town of Sheikh Zuweyid and the nearby city of el-Arish, killing a civilian and wounding three soldiers, security officials said. A string of militant attacks in the Sinai since Morsi's fall has killed 14 members of the security forces and several civilians.

___

Associated Press writer Raf Casert in Brussels contributed to this report.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ousted-egyptian-leaders-family-denounces-military-220013498.html

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Video: Ford to hire 800 white collar workers

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Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/cnbc/52555437/

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