> > Wrapping up - Migrating away from US cloud services was easier than I expected.
> This is absolutely not the main takeaway and I find it difficult to see how he could write this
He explains why he writes this, but this is an incredibly silly complaint because you can’t know what his expectations were.
> The only meaningful switch he mentions is Proton, but as other comments have pointed out they have vendor lock-in problems.
Which the author had with Microsoft 365 as well. Considering reducing vendor lock in wasn’t a goal of what they were trying to do, it’s not clear why you’re even raising that point.
> The real takeaway from this is that it's currently impossible in any meaningful sense.
It’s not clear how you got to this conclusion in any way whatsoever. In fact, this is an entirely ridiculous assertion.
Essentially your entire comment is “the author didn’t aim to do what I wanted them to aim to do therefore the author is wrong”.
He explains why he writes this, but this is an incredibly silly complaint because you can’t know what his expectations were.
> The only meaningful switch he mentions is Proton, but as other comments have pointed out they have vendor lock-in problems.
Which the author had with Microsoft 365 as well. Considering reducing vendor lock in wasn’t a goal of what they were trying to do, it’s not clear why you’re even raising that point.
> The real takeaway from this is that it's currently impossible in any meaningful sense.
It’s not clear how you got to this conclusion in any way whatsoever. In fact, this is an entirely ridiculous assertion.
Essentially your entire comment is “the author didn’t aim to do what I wanted them to aim to do therefore the author is wrong”.