I have a lot of confidence in the guy and we work very well together.

It was too compelling to stay away.

We're seeing server consolidation numbers of about five to one.

If it worked out, they would probably put the JVM on the second or third wave of the XP rollout.

If you are a wireless service provider, your revenue model is increasingly based on interactive content. They are likely to generate some interesting content by looking to the large base of Java developers.

If you ask data center systems to turn into 10 more machines per machine, suddenly you've created a dramatic problem in managing these. Whether a machine is physical or virtual, it brings about the same management overhead.

I think there is a very good chance Java will by far be the dominant platform. We have folks in the product development arm that walk around half the day worried about better battery life on devices. They are really into this stuff. That is the sign of maturation in a technology, and it creates a real barrier of entry to others.

We would obviously like that because it fulfills the offer we have had outstanding for a long time. All we are asking from any licensee is that you get out the latest stuff in a set amount of time from its release and you run the compatibility tests.