I've dealt with medicare, many state medicaids, the commercials (cigna, united, aetna), state bluecrosses (wellmark, wellcare, carefirst, highmark, etc). The government does healthcare as well or better than the commercials. I don't think privatization is working.
If you've heard about the recent Davita ESRD fraud thing on the news, medicare/medicaid finds fraud from them all the time. We've been involved in finding and reporting
As far as healthcare, is it an issue of private industry vs government, or is it a bigger problem with healthcare? I don't pretend to know anything about the healthcare industry definitively other than that it is mind-boggling-levels of complex.
@ssube what's the solution? Ask for altruism from multi-billion dollar private companies? Or make healthcare a public service and hope that we don't get boned by politicians (hah)
In my experience, most of which comes from playing Democracy 2 or 3, you need to: cut military spending, cut pensions, legalize drugs, and provide free healthcare, housing, and education.
The west coast that does useful stuff, the east coast doing useful stuff, the midwest existing, and the south who would probably start another war in short order.
I just don't understand how anyone could think that Trump has a chance? Popular vote wise Hillary has an edge. Electorally Hillary has it in the bag. And this is coming from soneone who wants neither of them to win.
@ssube Iowa's actually working on legalizing medical marijuana, with the ability to obtain it from Minnesota until they state can get their growing programs in place.
when jest mocks stuff, it breaks the actual implementation, so I have to unmock it in order to actually test the output of the function after I test that the class is being instantiated
Whenever I run into that, I refactor the class to either take the dependency (or a constructor/factory thereof) as a parameter. Usually a constructor param.
I dunno, I'd probably just refer to myself as a 'senior engineer' and leave it at that. If someone asks about my job description, I can mention that I'm a full stack dev.
package managers, dependency injection, semantic versioning, webpack and its ilk, high-level frameworks with massive communities, all of those are new since I started writing JS in high school to make my MySpace page a little cooler.
pure vanilla js, or pure vanilla js accessing the web api. becuase... even using react, angular, typescript, whatever, most of the logic/work is done in pure vanilla js, even in all of those.
Instead of dealing with massive amounts of vanilla JS code for a simple behavior, you have to learn a framework and how that does what you want
It can be argued that it hides implementation details, but with the advantage of not needing to know as much about how everything works under the hood. We're trying to drive to our destination, not build a car.
I enjoy writing JS with frameworks and tools to let me focus on encapsulating business logic and getting things working. If I had to implement a webapp in vanilla JS I'd shoot myself in the head.
Of course it's the same difficulty, but there are reasons languages are chosen over others, and that generally has to do more with how suitable the language is to the desired outcome of the program.
Making a webapp? Well, if it does anything browser-side, for right now, it's gotta use JS.
You can write it in a language that compiles or transpiles to JS, but it's gotta run as JS for now.
That monopoly has led to a huge community, now that there are frameworks to build different kinds of applications more easily.
If something else came along that could do the same thing natively, it still couldn't compete with the sheer power of the community in its current form.
It's neither a good nor a bad thing, to me. I don't have a problem with it.
I just prefer to use TypeScript over JS, in much the same way I prefer C++ to C.
It's effectively the same language with added features and a few extra steps to run.
> Picture a bank or other secure facility that has hired two separate private security services that spend all night sneaking around with flashlights trying to catch all the people sneaking around with flashlights.