Airbus moving critical systems away from AWS, Google, and MS

(old.reddit.com)

62 points | by taubek 2 days ago ago

10 comments

  • gorbiesRedScar 2 days ago

    European digital sovereignty pls.

    • fooker 2 days ago

      For the last decade or so Europe has managed to kill its tech industry by coming up with regulations only corporations with deep pockets can afford to satisfy.

      This seems to be changing, so hopefully that works out.

      • adev_ a day ago

        That's a very partial view of the story. Over-regulation does not help but it is very far from the only element:

        - Funding for startup in Europe is spare. There is nothing similar to the USA's VC culture here.

        - Market is naturally more fragmented due to language barrier.

        - Talent pool is spreader over multiple countries. We do not have any equivalent to the valley here.

        - There was (up to now) 0 protectionism that would give a competitive advantage on EU soil to a EU company in front of an American giant.

        • fooker 27 minutes ago

          You are describing the effects, rather than causes in my opinion.

  • gnabgib 2 days ago

    Discussion (415 points, 354 comments) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46334533

  • N19PEDL2 2 days ago
  • constantcrying 2 days ago

    What PLM software is Airbus using right now? Why isn't it running on prem already?

  • jMyles 2 days ago

    ...aren't we all.

  • Swoerd 2 days ago

    Because under Trump, the US cannot be trusted.

    • tpoacher 14 hours ago

      Trump or no Trump, the US shouldn't be trusted as a global gatekeeper, centralised authority, and single point of failure regardless.

      Trump having made this obvious without having locked all resources down and gone full Stalin yet in the process is doing the world a favour.

      "There are no accidents" ~Ugwe.