We're more balanced than a Microsoft solution provider, who pretty much promotes Windows as the answer no matter what the question is.

Last quarter there was $1.5 billion in Linux server sales as an industry, with Linux server revenue growing eight times that of the overall server market at 42 percent, versus five percent growth for the total sever market. That growth was also more than four times that of Microsoft's Windows Server, which gained 10 percent.

A third of workloads now being deployed on Linux come from Unix, a third from Windows and a third are new installations.

Let's not be confused. We all sit on the same side of the fence: all Java is good, all standards are good.

In a broad sense there are a lot of people working on the elusive nirvana of cross-platform development. This is a very specific area where we firmly believe and espouse as part of our strategy to use a language and an architecture that automatically gives you cross platform.

It's first at this point in time. We haven't had an integrated stack like this before.

We don't see this as commercial versus open source. More people are using the two together.

This is a new option for us.

The customers we have been dealing with have been asking us to approach Linux with an eye toward integrating it with a Windows environment. Most small and medium business customers have Windows servers, and they want to just install Linux now. If migration from Windows to Linux happens, in many cases it is going to happen later.