All this doesn't mean your back-end should be based on something like Microsoft Windows Server with MS Sql Server. Or modern equivalent of serverless Windows Azure.
Russians (and everyone closely watching) started that transition almost painlessly in 2014.
Have your own search engine. Have your own payment system. Base your infrastructure on open-source.
You know, be sovereign, not dependent.
The users switching from iOS to Android is just the last mile.
That would require banning US services. As the European industry (held down by bureaucracy) does not stand a chance to build solutions that can compete.
It seems like this is not on the horizon yet. And in the times of AI, it would probably result in a huge productivity hit.
> All this doesn't mean your back-end should be based on something like Microsoft Windows Server with MS Sql Server.
Why the hell not?
From a technology perspective (i.e., data/information theory/performance/what HN should be about), MSSQL is really, really hard to beat in a big enterprise ecosystem. This isn't because of decades of prerequisite evil dealings that make it a morally incompatible offering, but because it's been so thoroughly exposed to every possible use case that yours would certainly flow nicely.
I've been watching a lot of otherwise really compelling ideas and high energy teams get turned into complete shit due to these ideologies. I can understand a EU tech startup being hesitant toward US-based technology, but in 99% of the cases I hear about, it's a purely American tech company with zero international presence that is making a bunch of noise about how much they hate whatever domestic/paid/"closed" offerings.
Russians (and everyone closely watching) started that transition almost painlessly in 2014.
Have your own search engine. Have your own payment system. Base your infrastructure on open-source.
You know, be sovereign, not dependent.
The users switching from iOS to Android is just the last mile.