- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.zip
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.zip
Update from 3 days ago:
The European Commission has accepted our request, and starting from today – Friday March 6 – has added the Open Document Format ODS version of the spreadsheet to be used to provide the feedback.
https://blog.documentfoundation.org/blog/2026/03/05/cra-guidances/
These kind of things show how detached politicians are from their actual job. Shouldn’t they be the FIRST to change, given that they’re the ones whose direct job is to protect our sovereignty?
They’re still mostly on X, including left wing ones… so… there’s that.
There’s a difference between a public communications platform and internal tooling. X-Twitter is a shithole, but still a place many people can be reached, which, in my opinion, is important enough for politicians to justify its continued usage.
But there’s no public communications function to using MS Office over Libre Office. If anything, there’s a should-be-confidential communications function to it. Exposing that to foreign actors seems reckless even under the most amicable of relations, and what we have now is definitely not the most amicable.
So using X is an unfortunate concession to the Network Effect and its bearing on political public work, but using MS Office (whatever name it goes by these days, I lost track) is a liability.
(That said: get the fuck off of X, people, so our politicians can too. I’d prefer Mastodon, but even bsky is relatively more acceptable than X or Threads. Just go anywhere, please.)
I see your point, but still, that’s no excuse for X, it was never the network of the people, it’s used by politicians, reporters and news junkies. Most people never used it. Politicians and reporters are just addicted to it and too lazy to move anywhere else…
What you’re not taking into account is that many politicians are either completely inept at technology, profoundly stupid, or both.
It‘s not just politicians but also people working in the administration.
inept […] stupid, or both.
Strange way to spell corrupt.
Or bought by fascists, or maliciously and willingly participate in it.
I could not disagree more. This kind of thinking is why the world is messed up. No one wants to make changes, the expect others to make the change for them. We as individuals, acting together as a collective, have to make the changes needed. Politicians are just people who can communicate better than you or I, they don’t always know the right path. We have to define that for them.
What you’re describing is absolutely not my thinking, I very much agree and in fact bring up myself often that collective action should be the norm. I just see politicians as part of this collective, and within the context of representative democracy where we currently live in, expected to be more aware of political context and meaningful action, because that’s literally their profession. Collective action should exist regardless and if needed “help” with the shortcomings of incompetent representatives, but in any case it invites to look closely at how well representatives are qualified, and motivated to do their jobs.
Ahh, OK. I get you now. Sorry for misreading the intent.
No problem, it was not very clear
And if you’re one of those people who think that Office is superior to LibreOffice because of its ribbon interface, the TDF thinks you’re wrong and that you only tolerate that layout due to a psychological normalization effect forced by Microsoft.
The UX engineer seems to be in charge of PR too. Not that it’s completely wrong, just a fucking hilarious thing to be saying.
LibreOffice is missing the forest for the trees with this: yes, the ribbon isn’t the greatest paradigm, but the open-source suite looks like it hasn’t had any visual update at all since 2003.
I’m pretty sure a facsimile of the ribbon interface is available in LibreOffice.
There is… It’s just really not very good. Last time I checked, it didn’t have keyboard shortcuts.
Rather than a facsimile, I’d just call the LibreOffice ribbon a distant cousin because they’re both office applications. The ribbon does slightly ease the friction of getting people to try LibreOffice, but like with the Windows UI and KDE Plasma, the similarities are surface-level and there are tons of differences. It’d be cool if public education taught people the UI of the commons first, not of the Microsoft defaults.
In marketing speak this is called “Eating your own dog food” and is something that the EU definitely should adopt.
Yeah, in Portugal the NP (Portuguese Norm) for documents is ODF, yet all the state uses Micro$lop’s Office. Can’t wait to have to send them some docs and rubb their noses in it.





