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Hacker News1 Danish government agency to ditch Microsoft software (2025)Denmark's tech modernization agency is replacing Microsoft products with open-source software like LibreOffice to reduce dependence on U.S. tech firms and achieve "digital sovereignty." Over half the ministry's staff will switch next month, with full transition by year-end. This follows similar moves by Copenhagen, Aarhus, and German state Schleswig-Holstein, driven by cost concerns, market dominance issues, and political tensions with Washington. Technical challenges with LibreOffice adoption: Danish hospital developer reports LibreOffice crashes with poor logging, making debugging difficult. LibreOffice Foundation offers support and will update Maven artifacts. Discussion covers alternatives like OnlyOffice (sanctioned due to Russian ties) and Collabora, with emphasis on collaborative editing needs.European digital sovereignty movement: Europe is reducing dependence on US tech infrastructure due to geopolitical concerns and data sovereignty issues. The CLOUD Act allows US government access to data from American companies regardless of location. Multiple EU countries are transitioning away from Microsoft, Visa/Mastercard.Government funding and implementation challenges: Governments should fund open source development proportional to saved licensing fees. Implementation faces resistance from employees reluctant to change, Microsoft lobbying, and complex dependencies like Active Directory that are harder to replace than office suites.
Reddit science1 Using scented products indoors changes the chemistry of the air, producing as much air pollution as car exhaust does outside, according to a new study. Researchers say that breathing in these nanosized particles could have serious health implications.Using scented products indoors, such as flame-free candles and wax melts, can create significant indoor air pollution comparable to car exhaust. Research by Purdue University found these products release nanosized particles that can penetrate deep into lungs and potentially enter the bloodstream, posing serious respiratory health risks. Misleading title scope: Discussion about how study only focused on wax melts but title suggests all scented products, with debate about whether findings could logically extend to other scented itemsHealth concerns from chemist: A chemist's perspective against using scented products leads to sharing of personal health impact stories, from COPD to cancer cases, and debate about necessity of artificial scentsAir purification solutions: Discussion of HEPA filters and other air purification methods as solutions, with debate about effectiveness against different types of pollutants like VOCs and nanoparticles
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