Will New European Commission Leaders Welcome Open Source and Open Standards?
First time accepted submitter jenwike writes As Neelie Kroes leaves the office of the European Commission's VP of the Digital Agenda, we need to take a look the new, incoming leadership and ask where they stand on open source software and open standards. The Public Policy Director for Red Hat, Paul Brownell, gives thoughts on the two politicians that President-Elect Junker has named to lead on ICT for the new Commission: former Estonian Prime Minister Andrus Ansip has been named as Vice President for Digital Single Market; and incumbent European Commissioner for Energy Gunther Oettinger (a German politician and lawyer) has been named as Commissioner for Digital Economy and Society.
Protip: Redhat and IBM are both largish businesses that support open source and have a good chance of getting contracts should the EU be more open source friendly.
It is more likely that Microsoft will remain the default because people generally fear change. Especially when someone's job (usually their own) is on the line. I've worked on showing everyone I can how friendly and useable GNU/Linux is. The only people that enjoy it are my wife and kids. My parents, siblings, and in-laws think its kinda cool, but absolutely refuse to switch. It isn't just that they don't think it's worth their time to try something new. They seem to be genuinely afraid to try anything other than Windows.
They would rather buy new computers than deal with trying Linux. I already told them I am no longer fixing viruses with Windows--they will get Linux if they bug me about software again. So if the virus scanner doesn't take care of it, they just buy a new system.
There in no religion higher than truth.