> From: Tope Akinniyi > <snip> experiences. As an IT organisation that wants to stay in business you need to give to people what they wants. I think that is the basis of service. I have some deployments of PostgreSQL on Windows servers. I must admit that we have not had any problems so far. </snip> Dear Tope, My apologies that I cannot answer your questions directly, hopefully someone else will on the list. Understand that this is not really that much of a cultural issue. Both Linux and Postgres are born from interational cooperation. Even in the United States, windows use is pervasive, with very little support or desire for Linux (or other non-windows operating systems). The long history of Posix systems in the United States is really limited to educational, research institutions and a very small percentage of commercial enterprises. Linux has changed this a little over the last 5 years or so. But I personally know dozens of IT professionals local to my area and only one of them is what I would call a linux expert. This same ratio applies to the end user market. If what your customers really want is reliablity and replication options, then that currently conflicts with Windows and Postgres. Noone can really guarantee that will change. But I submit that if you really want to acheive excellence in the IT business you will educate yourself and then your customers about using Linux for dedicated database services. You will realize high reliability and easy maintenance for very low per user cost as compared to just about anything else. You may want to contact the folks at this web address for local linux support. http://nglug.org/ In any case I wish you the best of luck in your business. Best regards, Jim Wilson ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 1: subscribe and unsubscribe commands go to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx