• GirthBrooksPLO@lemmy.world
          link
          fedilink
          English
          arrow-up
          1
          ·
          8 minutes ago

          I think the Dutch are doing it as well. I’m all for it, when I switched my laptop over from Windows 11 to NixOS, it stopped running at like a 100 degrees while doing nothing more than streaming video and light compiling.

        • hayvan@piefed.world
          link
          fedilink
          English
          arrow-up
          4
          ·
          1 day ago

          I’m still grieving over XMPP. We could have an amazingly decentralized messaging platform. Google even based their own GoogleTalk over XMPP for a while, but a cluster of walled proprietary bullshit services won in the end, and Google layer switched to their own proprietary bullshit.

        • XLE@piefed.social
          link
          fedilink
          English
          arrow-up
          2
          arrow-down
          1
          ·
          1 day ago

          That’s causing a lot of chaos in the online world isn’t it?

          France switched to OnlyOffice and Nextcloud, and now there’s a feud between the two. I can’t imagine using an office suite that’s possibly a dead-end fork of a company that’s fighting with the cloud drive I use to upload my documents.

          • Munkisquisher@lemmy.nz
            link
            fedilink
            English
            arrow-up
            1
            ·
            16 hours ago

            They saw that only office had sketchy ownership and couldn’t work with them, so a group of EU companies including nextcloud have forked it and are working on Euro-office. The license violation argument is just a tantrum from onlyoffice

          • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
            link
            fedilink
            English
            arrow-up
            10
            ·
            1 day ago

            There will be short-term chaos, but now you have a sovereign entity with a huge amount of money creating a market for solutions to those problems.

            It also makes it so that standards become more important than whatever latest feature is included in .docx files. Fancy capabilities do not mean much when you can’t send the files to the government without converting them into a standards-compliant format.

            With broad adoption of standards comes the ability for competition to build compatible products and services. Microsoft can’t just change Word or Edge in a way that breaks the software of competitors if nobody is trapped in their walled garden.