I'd toss Windows 2003 Server (probably Web Edition) and ASP.NET (using either VB.NET or preferably, C#) into the equation, too. While its Windows, it's pretty different in terms of TCO, security, and support than Windows 2000.
Depending on the amount of code running on the server, number of staff, staff skills, I wouldn't necessarily be too hot on moving every aspect of the project to a different platform. At least with 2003, they could run their existing ASP applications, and port them to a more managable ASP.NET codebase as timeframes permit. For those not in the know, ASP and ASP.NET are about as related as PHP and ASP. Entirely new platform, language, framework, yadda yadda. /jgw _______________________________________________ EuG-LUG mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mailman.efn.org/cgi-bin/listinfo/eug-lug