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CIRCLE WITH A DOT

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  3. I saw this on a Finnish post, so let me reformulate it a bit and post it in English.

I saw this on a Finnish post, so let me reformulate it a bit and post it in English.

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linuxircfinlandsuomi
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  • uint8_t@chaos.socialU This user is from outside of this forum
    uint8_t@chaos.socialU This user is from outside of this forum
    uint8_t@chaos.social
    wrote last edited by
    #38

    @StryderNotavi @funambolo @anttipeltola oh yes. running on cloud, vendors are also less incentivized to write efficient code. if they spend a million on aws anyways, they won’t mind a 200k software license on top of that. You’ll have a harder time selling the same solution if your software runs just fine on just 2 servers from 5 years ago.

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    • anttipeltola@mastodon.worldA anttipeltola@mastodon.world

      I saw this on a Finnish post, so let me reformulate it a bit and post it in English.

      Finnish universities 1996:

      "Here's an operating system we created for you. Here's a chat network we created you can use with the operating system."

      Finnish universities 2026:

      "We don't know how to replace Facebook for public communications."

      Learned helplessness.

      #Linux #IRC #Finland #Suomi

      A This user is from outside of this forum
      A This user is from outside of this forum
      avincentinspace@furry.engineer
      wrote last edited by
      #39

      @anttipeltola in fairness, when you want to do public communications, you can't ask the public to come to you

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • anttipeltola@mastodon.worldA anttipeltola@mastodon.world

        I saw this on a Finnish post, so let me reformulate it a bit and post it in English.

        Finnish universities 1996:

        "Here's an operating system we created for you. Here's a chat network we created you can use with the operating system."

        Finnish universities 2026:

        "We don't know how to replace Facebook for public communications."

        Learned helplessness.

        #Linux #IRC #Finland #Suomi

        nettings@mastodon.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
        nettings@mastodon.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
        nettings@mastodon.social
        wrote last edited by
        #40

        @anttipeltola German universities in 2002: we use Java on Windows because it was there. German universities today: we don't understand the problem, we use X and Tiktok, plus you can follow a small subset of classes on MS Teams.

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        • funambolo@mastodon.worldF funambolo@mastodon.world

          @anttipeltola exactly. It is also absurd how the public sector believes it is ok to pay hundreds of millions of euros to U.S. companies instead of probably spending a fraction of that money build their own solution based on existing open source code and open standard.

          mixmistressalice@ni.hil.istM This user is from outside of this forum
          mixmistressalice@ni.hil.istM This user is from outside of this forum
          mixmistressalice@ni.hil.ist
          wrote last edited by
          #41

          @funambolo @anttipeltola And as the public sector is mainly financed through taxes taken from the workforce, it's a shame.

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • anttipeltola@mastodon.worldA anttipeltola@mastodon.world

            I saw this on a Finnish post, so let me reformulate it a bit and post it in English.

            Finnish universities 1996:

            "Here's an operating system we created for you. Here's a chat network we created you can use with the operating system."

            Finnish universities 2026:

            "We don't know how to replace Facebook for public communications."

            Learned helplessness.

            #Linux #IRC #Finland #Suomi

            mlabowicz@hachyderm.ioM This user is from outside of this forum
            mlabowicz@hachyderm.ioM This user is from outside of this forum
            mlabowicz@hachyderm.io
            wrote last edited by
            #42

            @anttipeltola hard to vibe code an os Kernel...

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            • mkj@social.mkj.earthM This user is from outside of this forum
              mkj@social.mkj.earthM This user is from outside of this forum
              mkj@social.mkj.earth
              wrote last edited by
              #43

              Office 365 / Microsoft 365 / Microsoft Copilot / whatever they are calling it this week has some 400-450 million users worldwide, give or take. I don't know what the *average* price per seat is for that, but listed prices in Europe are around €10/month/user. That'd be some 50-55 billion euros per year.

              I would argue that we collectively are *not* getting several tens of billions of euros per year of added value over alternatives out of the deal.

              @Mellivora @uint8_t @funambolo @anttipeltola

              mkj@social.mkj.earthM 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • mkj@social.mkj.earthM mkj@social.mkj.earth

                Office 365 / Microsoft 365 / Microsoft Copilot / whatever they are calling it this week has some 400-450 million users worldwide, give or take. I don't know what the *average* price per seat is for that, but listed prices in Europe are around €10/month/user. That'd be some 50-55 billion euros per year.

                I would argue that we collectively are *not* getting several tens of billions of euros per year of added value over alternatives out of the deal.

                @Mellivora @uint8_t @funambolo @anttipeltola

                mkj@social.mkj.earthM This user is from outside of this forum
                mkj@social.mkj.earthM This user is from outside of this forum
                mkj@social.mkj.earth
                wrote last edited by
                #44

                Borrowing the thread briefly but https://michael.kjorling.se/blog/2025/microsoft-365-switch-donate/ (which I wrote about a year ago) goes into a little more depth about that, and I think shows just how little value we're getting out of the deal compared to what we *could* get if all of the money paid actually went toward developing the software, by example of LibreOffice.

                @Mellivora @uint8_t @funambolo @anttipeltola

                funambolo@mastodon.worldF 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • mkj@social.mkj.earthM mkj@social.mkj.earth

                  Borrowing the thread briefly but https://michael.kjorling.se/blog/2025/microsoft-365-switch-donate/ (which I wrote about a year ago) goes into a little more depth about that, and I think shows just how little value we're getting out of the deal compared to what we *could* get if all of the money paid actually went toward developing the software, by example of LibreOffice.

                  @Mellivora @uint8_t @funambolo @anttipeltola

                  funambolo@mastodon.worldF This user is from outside of this forum
                  funambolo@mastodon.worldF This user is from outside of this forum
                  funambolo@mastodon.world
                  wrote last edited by
                  #45

                  @mkj @Mellivora @uint8_t @anttipeltola that blog post was a good read. I think the Big Tech has always worked on the "divide and conquer" principle - it has always been easiest to "just pay" and be done with it.

                  mkj@social.mkj.earthM 1 Reply Last reply
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                  • funambolo@mastodon.worldF funambolo@mastodon.world

                    @mkj @Mellivora @uint8_t @anttipeltola that blog post was a good read. I think the Big Tech has always worked on the "divide and conquer" principle - it has always been easiest to "just pay" and be done with it.

                    mkj@social.mkj.earthM This user is from outside of this forum
                    mkj@social.mkj.earthM This user is from outside of this forum
                    mkj@social.mkj.earth
                    wrote last edited by
                    #46

                    @funambolo Also similarly, how little it *really* takes on a per-user basis to make a huge difference for a free software project with any sort of wide appeal.

                    There are people who are genuinely going to be strapped for cash. Fine. But if someone can afford to pay ~ €10/month for Microsoft's offering, and switch to LibreOffice instead, they probably *can* afford to pay € 2-3/month for that even though it's not required. If lots of people do that, it'll add up.

                    @Mellivora @uint8_t @anttipeltola

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                    • funambolo@mastodon.worldF funambolo@mastodon.world

                      @anttipeltola exactly. It is also absurd how the public sector believes it is ok to pay hundreds of millions of euros to U.S. companies instead of probably spending a fraction of that money build their own solution based on existing open source code and open standard.

                      anzah@raphus.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
                      anzah@raphus.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
                      anzah@raphus.social
                      wrote last edited by
                      #47

                      @anttipeltola @funambolo

                      Universities still do cool things in Finland. The Finnish space industry got a big boost from essentially an university project.

                      Hopefully stuff like that still keeps happening.

                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • funambolo@mastodon.worldF funambolo@mastodon.world

                        @anttipeltola exactly. It is also absurd how the public sector believes it is ok to pay hundreds of millions of euros to U.S. companies instead of probably spending a fraction of that money build their own solution based on existing open source code and open standard.

                        krono@toot.berlinK This user is from outside of this forum
                        krono@toot.berlinK This user is from outside of this forum
                        krono@toot.berlin
                        wrote last edited by
                        #48

                        @funambolo @anttipeltola This is exactly what @zendis is trying to do with https://www.opendesk.eu/en in Germany … and beyond; the ICC is to switch to openDesk, too: https://interoperable-europe.ec.europa.eu/collection/open-source-observatory-osor/news/international-criminal-court-invests-open-infrastructure

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