I don't want Europe to grow its own hyperscalers. Companies that become too big are a problem no matter who owns them. Instead, lets bring a healthy and thriving ecosystem of small and medium sized organizations to do hosting and who co-operate.
liw@toot.liw.fi
Posts
-
I don't want Europe to grow its own hyperscalers. -
Naisasialiitto Unioni kerää allekirjoituksia My Voice, My Choice -kansalaisaloitteeseen EU:n laajuisen aborttioikeuden puolesta.Naisasialiitto Unioni kerää allekirjoituksia My Voice, My Choice -kansalaisaloitteeseen EU:n laajuisen aborttioikeuden puolesta.
Allekirjoitin.
On kiire, deadline on huomenna.
-
I mostly don't like notifications: they keep interrupting me when I'm working.I mostly don't like notifications: they keep interrupting me when I'm working. Another reason is that most types of notifications don't persist. I have to react at once, at least enough to write down a reminder, or I'll miss what happened. I prefer the inbox model of email: new stuff lands in the inbox and can check them when I have time, and stuff stays in inbox until I remove it, which means I don't miss stuff so much.
-
Whatever this European tech sovereignty formulates into DO NOT give us European Big Tech.@anttipeltola I agree. A problem with very big companies I see is that they're hard to regulate. Another is that they tend to not serve the people using them. An ecosystem with a small number of very big players seems inherently less healthy and less likely to cope with disasters than one with many players of different size, which can still collaborate.
Very, very large projects are easier for very, very big players. But still possible by collaboration among smaller players.