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this post was submitted on 05 Apr 2024
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This isn't going to happen.
This headline comes up every year that it's time for the government to negotiate contracts with Microsoft. Once they get the best price they think they can, they will accept it and issue a news release that "we're staying in Windows after all".
It's lame, but it's what is going to happen.
I remember some city in Germany actually doing it some years back and then eventually giving up and switching back.
googles
It's a little unclear exactly what software was and wasn't switched, but sounds like it's Munich, and now they're back on LibreOffice again.
https://winbuzzer.com/2020/05/14/munich-ditches-microsoft-office-and-windows-in-favor-of-open-source-xcxwbn/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LiMux
EDIT: I guess I should have just read the other comment responding to the parent, which mentioned Munich.
Amd just after Munich announced it will go back to Windows, Microsoft decided to move its German central to Munich. What a coincidence.
Munich did exactly that in 2017, so let's see how far Sleswig-Holstein is willing to go, hopefully they won't be falling for Microsofts sweet talk.
The reason Munich switched back to Windows, when users were just fine working with Limux, was a corrupt politician who ordered the return to windows, probably pocketing a hefty bribe in the process.
Source?
https://www.zdnet.de/88202452/stadt-muenchen-erwaegt-abkehr-von-linux/
The article from 2014 explains how this was mostly a political quarrel, with a former administration transitioning away from Microsoft (which as a US corporation has no business in any government administration of another country), and the conservatives pushing (under a "social democrat" mayor, admittedly) to go back to MS against technological advice.
In other words: the "manyfold complaints" were an "ad populum" argument without sources and were most likely made up.
!remindme 1 fiscal quarter