Microsoft says vaccine tools have ‘come up short’ after DC troubles

Photographer: Johnny Milano / Bloomberg

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Commonly used vaccine planning software from Microsoft Corp. who has run into trouble in states like Iowa and New Jersey has been blamed for problems that prevented some residents of the capital from meeting.

After three consecutive days of problems with the District of Columbia’s online vaccination registry, the technology company in Redmond, Washington, along with the city government, released a statement acknowledging “our efforts were failing” and pledging to address the issues.

“We understand the frustration of individuals who tried to use the district’s vaccination portal this week,” they said. “We are committed to addressing technical issues so that the vaccination appointment portal is functional and accessible.”

The problems in DC represent another black eye for Microsoft, which has heavily touted its software as a way to aid in rapid implementation and planning of vaccines. In recent years, the software giant has increasingly focused on healthcare and hospital systems as customers for its cloud and artificial intelligence systems, including the launch of an industry-tailored cloud software suite last year.

Frustrated users of the system took to Twitter to post a litany of complaintsincluding Captcha response tests not working, service unavailable errors and web page crashes.

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