The cost [of moving to the suburbs] is driven by whether or not there happens to be fiber nearby already. In our case, we were lucky. There was some fiber nearby, so they didn't have to string 40 miles of new fiber for us.

We buy applications, not platforms. If the applications don't run on Windows 2000, then we won't buy it. Just because a new operating system is out doesn't mean we are going to buy it. The third-party apps will need to support it.

Generally, what we've seen is the vast majority of open source software still focuses on the Linux space, but the amount of open source that will run on Windows is increasing.

Some of the things you monitor no longer mean the same thing.