>I am what most people would consider a highly trained technical professional.
Yeah, sure...
>Compared to the best known opensores webserver "Red Hat"
There is not such thing as "Red Hat" webserver. You don't even know the name of the most popular OSS web-server. Yes, you really seem to be a "highly trained technical professional"...
>Application development and support costs for Windows compared to an opensores solution like J2EE.
J2EE is not OSS.
You really have no clue what you are talking about, do you?
Yes, it has already. Is that a problem?
From the Chungles web site: "It's a file-sharing program for local networks that runs on any platform."
Chungles uses SWT instead of Swing. SWT being available on a fewer platforms than Swing, Chungles is even less portable than a pure Java application.
Don't take me wrong: I love SWT but it is definitely not an option if we want to make an application available on as many platforms as possible.
>I am what most people would consider a highly trained technical professional.
Yeah, sure...
>Compared to the best known opensores webserver "Red Hat"
There is not such thing as "Red Hat" webserver. You don't even know the name of the most popular OSS web-server. Yes, you really seem to be a "highly trained technical professional"...
>Application development and support costs for Windows compared to an opensores solution like J2EE.
J2EE is not OSS.
You really have no clue what you are talking about, do you?