- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.ml
- linux@programming.dev
- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.ml
- linux@programming.dev
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.zip/post/36434036
A new community-led initiative called “EU OS” to develop a Linux distribution initiative looks like a positive development. It is specifically created to address the unique requirements of the European Union’s (EU) public sector organizations. For me, this initiative stands out for its commitment to the EU’s digital sovereignty, reducing reliance on external vendors, and creating a secure, independent digital ecosystem.
Going with Fedora KDE is a really solid choice, been rocking this for two years and it’s stable as fuck and quite similar to Windows, so the
incompetentelderlystubborn people in the government might be able to work with it, too.Oh, let me tell you about the incompetent Gen Z kids I get calls from every day.
mint is kinda an eu one
Just in case nobody reads the article:
EU OS is not an entirely new operating system and uses a Linux foundation based on Fedora and KDE Plasma as the desktop environment.
The main advantage of EU OS lies in its focus on standardization rather than creating something entirely new. It offers a shared Linux foundation that can be fine-tuned with additional bits, regardless of whether it be for national, regional, sector-specific, or organizational use.
EU OS = KDE Fedora
So if you install KDE Fedora, then you have EU OS so far until there are more standards in place.
Linux already have organization tasked with standarization
Are they EU focused?
No
if something is EU focused then I suppose we could call it EU standard. That is: a standard among EU countries and no where else.
This is bad. We need one single international standarrd and we have one.
The EU standards are not set yet. They are open to change. If you feel they need to change, chime in to them.
They are just selecting what they think is best
Is this 3 we’re at now? Still none based on a European foundation like Suse. These people are morons.
So… Another Ubuntu spin?