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rambambramyesterday at 11:24 AM2 repliesview on HN

The EU has Schleswig-Holstein (a German state) as an example; office software and email replaced by open source alternatives. Look overthere, I would say. But overthere is a politician who actually understands what he is talking about.

I don't feel the need to provide governments/politicians with open source software who think like this: "open source – which is a public good to be freely used".

Start understanding how this works, because your American and Chinese counterparts do a better job at this.

By the way, don't come lazily asking for input. Go out proactively and find the answers yourself.


Replies

NoboruWatayayesterday at 1:34 PM

> By the way, don't come lazily asking for input. Go out proactively and find the answers yourself.

The EU very regularly asks for input on new policy initiatives, it's one of the better aspects of the legislative/policy-making process. They are asking citizens' opinions on a policy that will potentially affect them, if you tell them to f off and do it themselves then don't be surprised when you hate the policy that comes out of it.

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yuchtmanyesterday at 1:53 PM

They also have a major german city (Munich) who moved to Open Source, gave up and moved back. The SH project is rather new.

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