• pojntfx 4 hours ago

For anyone interested in the current state of things in Switzerland, there is this handy map of which Swiss municipalities are dependent on Microsoft/the US right now: https://mxmap.ch/

• dang 2 hours ago

Currently discussed here: 2,100 Swiss municipalities showing which provider handles their official email - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47828420

• gnabgib 2 hours ago

A post from the same account, no less :|

• doener 2 hours ago

Actually it's only the eMail handling which is probably the easiest one to replace.

• dethos 3 hours ago

Nice. I wonder how hard it would be to take the open-source code of the project and adapt it to other countries.

• 1over137 4 hours ago

Cool map! MX as in mail exchanger. For something as easy (for IT pros at least) as email, that map should be all green!

• arcza 3 hours ago

Not easy at all.

Think about integrating calendars, corporate contacts (from AD), handling RSVP replies said mx server receives and updating the calendar server, securely deal with modern auth (+ legacy krb5 auth, yuk). It's a huge hassle and everything except Exchange only handles 80% of this.

Modern expectations now want: web clients (OWA), todo lists, integrated storage (SP/OneDrive), and push notifications to any phone from any vendor.

So yeah, the only on prem solution is still Exchange.

• prmoustache 2 hours ago

I don't think these things are as important as you think.

RSVP for example. Nobody read or cares who and what people reply. In the last 4 companies I worked for (including one in Switzerland), nobody cared if I accepted or confirmed my attendance to the meeting and would try to call me/force me into a meeting even when my status showed I was on another shsring my screen. And nobody seems to respond nowadays nor check calendars for availability and avoiding conflicts.

• arcza an hour ago

But what about push notifications to mobile? I'm not aware of anything that handles this as well as Exchange ActiveSync. it's reasonable that you get an email within sub 1 minute latency, not 15 min polling.

• pheggs 2 hours ago

if you dont mind asking, what dont you like about kerberos? I personally like it quite with certs / hardware token

to be honest, most things you list can be setup with some research. The only one I am not sure about is integrated storage, but then I am also not entirely sure what that even is supposed to mean exactly

• arcza 2 hours ago

The user experience between a phone, tablet and computer should be symbiotic. Krb is not a first class thing in the mobile world. So users now hav great Krb experience with Outlook.exe but are typing passwords into Safari at owa.example.com (anywhere you type an AD password that isn't lsass or ADFS is really not good posture)

So, passwords are bad and the password is a key component of krb. Moving away from passwords is a step in the right direction eg OIDC.

• pheggs an hour ago

right given the product names I assume you are on windows. with kerberos people shouldnt have to type their passwords into apps at all, and if you use pkinit there are no passwords at all?

i give you the mobile part, I dont know how well it is supported - iOS claims to have support though, and android through third parties I believe. Never tried that. Its just that I personally have a preference for auth methods that dont require opening a browser for desktop apps

• stephenhuey 4 hours ago

> This comes as a surprise, as Microsoft 365 was recently installed on some 54,000 administration workstations

Not really surprising. The people Microsoft wined and dined for the contract are not the same people who agree with Thomas Süssli about reducing the dependency. I look forward to seeing them succeed!

• pheggs 2 hours ago

I have switched my small swiss business (10 people) to linux (servers and desktops) and away from microsoft around 2020. I am extemely happy about the choice. Theres small friction here and there with clients that rely on certain software, but its usually minimal and can be fixed. Some people here talk about how people need excel and how important it was, I have personally never seen that in practice here with any client or company I worked for in the past, but maybe it just went past me. It has not been an issue for me in the past 6 years.

• m463 3 hours ago

Doesn't everyone? ads, microsoft account required, undefeatable telemetry, and all wrapped up in dark patterns and bad user interfaces (perennial microsoft).

• forinti 2 hours ago

Unfortunately, the pain that Windows has become has yet to prevail over the fear of change for many users.

• Forgeties79 3 hours ago

And onedrive good lord what a pain

• throwfus 3 hours ago

Sooner Europeans boycott US companies the better. US is as rogue state as Russia and China

• augstein 36 minutes ago

Agreed. Maybe even more dangerous.

Achieving digital sovereignty is imperative for Europe, in any case.

• tahoeskibum 4 hours ago

Thirty years after Windows 95? How about focusing on AI or Starlink to reduce dependence now?

• pojntfx 4 hours ago

For AI: https://www.swiss-ai.org/ For Starlink: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eutelsat_OneWeb

It's debatable whether there is a need for the latter in Switzerland though. They have maybe the best fiber network in Europe, which far outperforms anything Satellite-based. You'll regularly get 25 Gb/s symmetrical on residential connections: https://sschueller.github.io/posts/the-free-market-lie/

• aucisson_masque 4 hours ago

Lol, starlink in Switzerland ?

They got the best fiber and the cheapest. They'd laugh at starlink.

• JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago

> starlink in Switzerland ?

I know a lot of people with Starlink in Schweiz. It's a mountainous country with a strong tradition of outdoorsmanship. From a military preparedness perspective, you're not guiding munitions with terrestrial fibre.

• grim_io 3 hours ago

You actually would want to use fibre.

It's the most jamming resistant drone control technique.

Ukraine and Russia rely on spools of optical cable strapped to drones.

• bdangubic an hour ago

> From a military preparedness perspective

from this perspective if 0.0000001% relies on Elon and USA you are as prepared as I am to fight Mike Tyson :)

• oblio 2 hours ago

> From a military preparedness perspective, you're not guiding munitions with terrestrial fibre.

https://www.reddit.com/r/Cyberpunk/comments/1prtlvg/city_in_...

• bdangubic 4 hours ago

starlink in switzerland is like trying to sell hershey to ferrero :)

• prmoustache 3 hours ago

Ferrero is Italian.

maybe you wanted to say Lindt & Sprüngli or Cailler (now part of Nestlé).

• bdangubic 3 hours ago

no, I meant to say piece of sh*t (hershey/starlink) and solid (ferrero/swiss fiber) :)

• bilekas 3 hours ago

Everyone does, Microslops business policy doesn't align with most governments.

• karmakurtisaani 4 hours ago

Simply replacing Excel will be a massive challenge.

I root for it, but it will be difficult.

• HiPhish 3 hours ago

Excel is the most widely used document format, database, software runtime, GUI framework and note taking app. It gives Emacs a run for its money in how much you can abuse and overuse one application.

• gerdesj 2 hours ago

Six wrongs don't make a right 8)

• rolph 4 hours ago

LibreOffice Calc: Free Spreadsheet Software for Windows, Mac, and Linux

https://en.libre-office.fr/article.php/libreoffice-calc-free...

give it a go. Ive never had problems for my use case.

• cookiengineer 3 hours ago

> LibreOffice Calc

Mentioning libreoffice as competitor to Excel and Access is like you haven't understood the market, at all.

Excel is a cross department business automation database, which can sync/pull/push datasets across filesystems and networks.

VBA is the single most used language in Enterprise because it allows to automate pretty much any financial workflow. And more importantly: automated by non-programmers.

Libreoffice is made for private users, and that's not the same users that VBA powered office documents have.

• rolph 3 hours ago

are you trying to say that i cant use libre, to automate, share, or collaborate datasets across a network?

https://help.libreoffice.org/latest/lo/text/sbasic/shared/vb...

are you trying to say its too hard to step into libre from VBS?

https://libreoffice-basic-reference.readthedocs.io/en/latest...

you can stay with MS if you want, but really you dont have to.

also i didnt mention libre as competitor, but as replacement.

• Vaslo 2 hours ago

You can do all those things. But as someone who used VBA extensively and often got hired because of my automation skills, not having VBA and other aspects of excel would be a non-starter.

• rolph 2 hours ago

your sure?

its really not that hard, and it might be useful, if MS ends up finding that final straw that breaks it for everyone, you would be better off having a head start and level ground, rather than staring up a wall for employment.

i recommend you orient to it, for future proofing.

scripting:

https://help.libreoffice.org/latest/en-US/text/shared/guide/...

API:

https://api.libreoffice.org/docs/idl/ref/annotated.html

BASIC:

https://wiki.documentfoundation.org/Documentation/BASIC_Guid...

Working with VBA Macros

https://help.libreoffice.org/latest/lo/text/sbasic/shared/vb...

• vrganj 2 hours ago

The French government decided on Grist as their replacement. It looks pretty promising: https://www.getgrist.com/

• hahajk 4 hours ago

I managed to convince my org to put up a Grist instance. I now use it for everything I would normally use Sheets for, plus a whole lot more. Row/columnwise permissions, file attachments, multiple views over data, python formulas...

It's a db not a spreadsheet but it's basically the tool I actually needed when I would reach for excel.

• Waterluvian 4 hours ago

I feel like Excel is their one true moat. Everything else is a business play, but Excel is the only truly superior tech compared to the alternatives.

• embedding-shape 4 hours ago

Besides just being everywhere and being ubiquitous (which isn't really a "tech benefit" anyways) what exactly makes Excel "truly superior tech compared to the alternatives"?

• Waterluvian 4 hours ago

There’s a lot of features. I think the one I would present is the enormously complex backwards compatibility support. Companies run on .xls / .xlsx files even if developers are offended by how they use and share them.

I think a lot of “just use Libre Office” arguments are much like “just use Linux.” There’s a deep misunderstanding of what the value is with Excel. Being technically equivalent with features scores very few points.

• cwnyth 3 hours ago

I've never experienced any compatibility issues with XLS(X) in LibreOffice Calc, and I've been Windows-free for over a decade. Sure, some spreadsheets might have unique functions in it, but I doubt that's the case for the majority over people using Excel.

I'd also argue that Excel is holding back businesses. Instead of storing information in CSVs (for R or Python processing) or SQL, people rely on it when they shouldn't. It's not just that developers dislike Excel, it's that using it frequently causes huge errors:

https://theconversation.com/the-reinhart-rogoff-error-or-how...

• esseph 3 hours ago

> Sure, some spreadsheets might have unique functions in it

Million and Billion dollar businesses run their whole companies off Excel. They're not really interested in the risk a software change would entail for their companies or individual careers.

> I'd also argue that Excel is holding back businesses.

Agree 100%

• prmoustache 2 hours ago

> Million and Billion dollar businesses run their whole companies off Excel. They're not really interested in the risk a software change would entail for their companies or individual careers.

I have heard that but never really observed that.

What you usually really have is a number of execs spending their live micromanaging via excel and annoying in cascade all the hierarchical levels below them with excel reports but only a small fraction of them usually have any real business logic and it wouldn't be complicated to switch to something else.

It is simply the good old resistance to change.

In my first job in IT while waiting for my first unix sysadmin role I did some windows support + migrations, I've seen medical secretaries enter in proper rage because we had replaced word 95 for word 97 and the icons were slightly different. Keyboards were launched against monitors. Even accross variying versions of products of the same editor resistance to change applies.

The biggest challenge with replacing Microsoft is licenses come bundled. With office 365 comes online storage/sharing platform, email, chat platform. If you want to move out you need to find alternatives for all of them and all at the same time otherwise you are paying more for the same thing.

• prmoustache 3 hours ago

I don't know are we sure about that? I remember helping users unable to open a spreadsheet that grew too big in excel. Was working fine on openoffice (libreoffice wasn't yet a thing).

• happygoose 3 hours ago

not activedirectory as well?

• slowhadoken 3 hours ago

Microsoft is getting creepy. OneDrive has surpassed McAfee as most aggressive proprietary virus.

• Ifkaluva 3 hours ago

I feel like this general story “x European country wants to reduce dependency on Microsoft” comes up at least once a year.

How do they usually turn out? I have heard Germany/France/? switching to LibreOffice or Linux for some government sector, but I suspect they quietly switch back.

• ozim 3 hours ago

Recent events make it quite clear that this time it is going to be different.

It was like you described earlier. Last year and this year it is basically cumulating over multiple countries.

Swiss people are very upset with what is going on with their military spending in US. I do believe they will be serious about all other purchases from US.

• greggoB 2 hours ago

> Swiss people are very upset with what is going on with their military spending in US

Can confirm, as a Swiss person I am flabbergasted at how the federal government keeps pushing for the new fighter jets to be F35s, despite not only the US' currenr erratic behaviour in general, but how it has changed the terms of the purchase deal. Blows my mind, honestly.

• prmoustache 3 hours ago

The whole gendarmerie in France switched more than 2 decades ago first to libreoffice (was openoffice in earlier days) then to their own ubuntu fork.

But it worked well because it is military, they can manage long term projects without too much external interference and there is zero friction (if the head decides, the rest follows without asking).

In regular public administration, decisions can easily be overturned depending on results of each elections and it is not uncommon to face internal sabotage.

• Cider9986 3 hours ago

Go for it, I'd say. Switzerland is a fascinating country, they lead in many areas. Zermatt, for example is a wonderful town with no cars.

• eps 3 hours ago

Zermatt is a ski resort for wealthy foreign tousrists, accessible only by train. But, yeah, it has no cars.

• mirekrusin 3 hours ago

Direct democracy instead of a cult of showman.

• givemeethekeys 4 hours ago

After so many years of EU countries talking, how much has Microsoft's top and bottom line been affected?

• sisve 4 hours ago

We move slow. But the clima for change is here now, it's been brewing for a decade or so. Expect Europe to not use more money on US services the next two decade. So with inflation you will really see a significant decline. My 5 cents

• tarrant300 4 hours ago

Switzerland is not in the EU. That said, if their goal is to get off US big-tech, I feel they're left with Apple for hardware and Google for software, realistically.

• londons_explore 4 hours ago

Even North Korea has it's own OS, network and application suite...

Switzerland could totally be fully computer-independant if they wanted to be.

• lpcvoid 4 hours ago

What? There's loads of hardware vendors out there. And I'd throw in Linux over google and apple.

• boondongle 3 hours ago

I'm still fascinated that Ukraine has been going on since 2014 and the EU has spent more time and air trying to go after US industries than Russian ones or Chinese. You'd think the US had actually captured Greenland.

Anyway I get it - just, odd to think about. Passion accounts for a lot.

• dijit 3 hours ago

You kidding?

Russian anything is completely off the table in europe..

There’s no discussion because it’s hard to discuss the absolute nothing that is happening.

• boondongle 2 hours ago

The Russian oil ban only occurred 8 years after the start of this. 2022. Russia had already taken European land for 8 years prior firmly backed by China. I won't even get into the Russian oil hair-pinning back to Europe via 3rd parties.

Again - all this action is within 1 and change years of Trump. It's a fairly visible difference in reaction. I just find it weird, that's all.

• mohamedkoubaa 3 hours ago

None of them care about Microsoft's shareholder value

• nxm 4 hours ago

Nil

• mistercheph 3 hours ago

Year of the Linux desktop!

• jandrewrogers 4 hours ago

Don't we all.

• fsflover 3 hours ago

Some of us have already done that.

• stynbeck 3 hours ago

Yes we do