The German government is working on an OSS "Sovereign Workplace"
The German government is working on an OSS "Sovereign Workplace"

BMI / openDesk - Der souveräne Arbeitsplatz / Deployment / sovereign-workplace · GitLab

It was announced about one year ago
I am curious how this will turn out. Germany is not known for state driven digital innovation and this is a huge project.
Even though I am highly sceptic, I hope they finally manage to get something going because Germany and whole Europe needs more independence from US hyperscalers.
I fear this will die in good old German bureaucracy though.
I believe so too, but there is hope because at least they're trying something. It should be "released" into the alpha stage in December, but I have no idea what it will look like.
Long history would imply continuity, not "so long ago that nobody in the comment section is old enough to have lived through it".
Glad comments don't get disappeared through downvoting, it's bad when people want to erase history.
This makes me skeptical too. I'd be interested to hear about smaller projects to replace some creaky system relying on the output of some long-gone contractor's overengineered software being faxed around.
Those projects have no cool name and are probably really hard to get funding for. But sometimes I can't help but feel that might be more effective than these "big bang" projects.
Oh clearly, let me fill my taxes online please
Oh clearly, let me fill my taxes online please
Oh clearly, let me fill my taxes online please
Dude Germany is literally the reason we have computers.
People love to give Turing all the credit, but he wouldn’t have needed to build it if not for the Germans.
Turing and Church did a lot of the heavy lifting for the theoretical side and contributed heavily to automating the decoding of the enigma encryption, but the most common modern computer architecture was decided in a conference in New York. The person that is credited with designing the architecture is named John Von Neumann.
Before them, it was Babbage, an Englishman. How did Germany contribute to computers? That's not to say that I don't think Germany can't handle designing this software, they definitely can. But they didn't have a very big hand in the history of computers
Probably like DE-mail.
DE-mail was doomed to fail from the start. Here, they did some things right. Let's see how it turns out.
What's that?