Microsoft is on the Ropes in Europe
- Dr. Roy Schestowitz
- 2008-04-11 02:52:41 UTC
- Modified: 2008-04-11 02:53:54 UTC
A few days ago we wrote about
European nations that rejected OOXML. We later showed how Microsoft/CompTIA lobbyist Jan van den Beld
made implicit threats against governments that 'dare' to refuse and ignore OOXML.
The European Union has never been quite so tolerant of aggressive behaviour. In fact, in a new document which has just been published it deals another big blow to Microsoft. The European Parliament
has begun evaluating a migration to GNU/Linux on the desktop, joining the French and Italian cabinets which already did so.
The European Parliament's IT department is testing the use of GNU/Linux distribution Ubuntu, OpenOffice, Firefox and other Open Source applications, the British MEP James Nicholson explained last week in a letter to Italian MEP Marco Cappato.
It's not the end of this story. At the same time, reports are circulating about what seems like an
embargo proposal.
Member of EU Parliament asks if Microsoft should be excluded from public procurement
[...]
Of course, if the EU Commission wants to find a way to avoid such a penalty, no doubt it can do so. We saw how creative rule-bending/creating can be in the ISO. But the very fact that this question is being placed on the table is remarkable in itself, don't you think? Something significant has shifted in Microsoft's universe. And if they are afraid to make such a move, due to the ubiquity of Microsoft software and their dependence upon it, might that alone not inspire some deep thoughts about the wisdom of doing something about that vulnerability?
There are many other reports about it. You can see it summarised here:
The next few posts will bring newer stories about misconduct that is related to OOXML.
⬆