

Companies have the option to migrate to EU providers to avoid the taxes on their infrastructure. Yes I know it’s not that easy. Bite the bullet or pay the tax.
Companies have the option to migrate to EU providers to avoid the taxes on their infrastructure. Yes I know it’s not that easy. Bite the bullet or pay the tax.
“No OS” will not make it to the average internet user, which is 99% of the population. If they have to select, they will select windows. The remaining 1% will figure it out, but that 1% won’t make any impact. We need a model that would pave the way for Linux to the average internet user.
The issue is that 99% of people don’t want to install an OS, they just want to have a computer that they can use as is. I’m not saying my proposal would be ideal, but something needs to change in the current model otherwise in 10 years time we will still be whining about Microsoft’s 90% market share
Thanks for reviewing it, I will fix these tonight!
I tried to find the Windows equivalent of this to compare the prices, but they don’t make it easy…
deleted by creator
We will sort this out next year. The opposition is leading the polls. Finally we have a good chance to end this nightmare.And banning the pride is just the tip of the iceberg
Proton, for example, offers a free tier. Your storage is limited, but at least it forces you to keep your inbox tidy. Looking back at my Gmail account, hard to believe I was happy with that mess for such a long time
It a shame though that there is no good alternative that covers the entire Europe. There are some regional retailers like Alza, Allegro, but I don’t know of any tha managed to roll out in all EU countries
Well I know for medium and large companies it may not be easy, depending on what cloud services they currently use. But for micro and small companies, that use cloud storage, and maybe some virtual machines in the cloud, there is no excuse. A Linux VM is a Linux VM no matter whether it is hosted on Aws or OVH cloud