Spyke
lemmy.world

Aaah, that’s a bit of a stretch. It is one Ministry doing the switch, which is nice, but hardly qualifies as “Denmark” or “the Danish government”.

24
Lorric17reply
lemmy.world

Also, they replace MS Office with Libreoffice for about 50% of users. It's also only the Ministry of Digital Affairs, which is the smallest Ministry with only 79 employees. No mention of Linux at all.

Complete shit article. Talk about one feather becoming five hens.

The real story is that Denmark is working on digital independence.

17

The real story is that Denmark is working on digital independence.

This. You first edge out of MSOffice and o351 dominance and then the 'need' to stay on windows becomes null as - see - everyone can work with leeberoffice on either the free or the pricy platform.

Add in some yum-cron and start showing off the no-boot or short-boot updates.

1

Actually this article says that it is only half of the digitalisation ministry that will make the switch

Likewise, the minister said that they would be switching back to windows if it turns out to be too complicated.

1
lemmy.world

Not sure this belongs in THIS community. It's not so much "positive news" as it is "a thing that happened".

It being positive depends on your own perspective. What makes it positive?

I guess it qualifies as news. Barely. I certainly wouldn't call it newsworthy.

It's like saying "This country has switched to decaf coffee" is positive news. It's not a bad thing. It's not really a good thing either. It's just something that factually happened, without much more to say.

-5

It's positive because it means further investment into Linux by vested organizations that don't have profit motives (eg governments) and less investment into proprietary profit-driven spyware (Microsoft). So very positive IMHO

15

Per your definition, this community should not exist because no news are universally good. Therefore no news belong here

It sounds more like you don't quite belong here

4

You reached the end