• 0 Posts
  • 43 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
cake
Cake day: August 1st, 2023

help-circle







  • They started out with sort of a ‘fail forward’ approach where as German entities were encouraged to try and implement different types of open source software of OS’es. Those experiments have led to a broader understanding and in the meantime they funded the greater project that became OpenDesk.

    This year they joined forced with the French government where the were doing the same sort of project with La Suite. The French and the German team joined in a 100 day sprint to deliver somewhere around September.


  • And I forgot to mention that the French government is on board as well.

    They on their side are launching La Suite which is based on the same building block as OpenDesk.

    https://code.gouv.fr/en/lasuite/

    Some figures for those wondering how broadly adapted this open source suite is.

    • Tchap: the trusted instant messaging service for the public sector used daily by 200,000 users. An extension of the Albert AI tool is planned for Tchap soon, during the summer.

    • State audio conference with nearly 8,000 users for 700 weekly meetings (2024 figure as of mid-May).

    • State web conference with 47,000 users for 10,000 weekly meetings (2024 figure as of mid-May).

    • State webinar: the webinar service which can accommodate up to 350 participants, public officials and interlocutors from outside the State (from the public, private or associative sectors) has recorded more than 800,000 users for 65,000 meetings weekly (2024 figure as of mid-May).

    • France transfer: the simple and secure solution for sending large files with 140,000 users having exchanged more than 350,000 letters (2024 figure as of mid-May).

    • Resana, a public sector collaborative platform with 140,000 users and nearly 800,000 documents shared/month (2024 figure as of mid-May).








  • I’m an early gen y’er. I’m fairly positive but that’s easy when you live in one of the wealthiest countries in the world. I have gen z children and their future is bright. We’re not rich but when they turn 18 (my daughter is 17) they have opportunities that I never had. It will be harder to gather wealth but they will be able to faal back on a steady base at home. My children can choose to go to university when they finish high school or take a sabbatical and travel the world. I don’t have the money to fund that but they are well educated enough to find the means of living wherever they go. If they want to have a meaningful life, then there are plenty of opportunities. If they just want a simple life with a job that provides a steady income, then that is fine.

    As I said, I live in one of the wealthiest countries of the world and in the safe harbour of the EU. I don’t know anything about your situation.