Thank you, for all your answers! We have one employee who has worked a lot with Windows, and same with OPC. So I can provide same answers. * Mike Hearn - OPC is mostly used for data collection, and to a lesser degree to control industrial machines. * Juan Lang AND Robert Shearman - OPC doesn't use named pipes. OPC uses Dcom over TCP. * Mike Hearn - OPC doesn't need any new Windows (2000, XP) parts, and should work on Win 98 with the added Dcom support (not tested). * Mike Hearn - Price of OPC for Linux was when I looked at it for about a year ago 3000 - 4000$ per project you used their API in. And it only supported one of the OPC versions. Now I guess that the prices has been going down... Now I also got some questions from your answers: * Did I understand correctly. Wine doesn't have a built in support for DCom, to be abel to use Dcom I have to add the DCom support from Windows 98 to the Linux system? And the problem with that is the MS License, it stops me from distribute those XXX.dll with a Linux product (hardware and software in this case.) * We want to make a OPC server, because other computers want to get information from our system. Is there a problem in make a DCOM server, is it the "no user can acsas port under 1024 on a Linux system" problem. * What I have heard I thought DCom uset RPC??? But Juan Lang wrote that Wine doesn't have support for RPC /Rickard -- ___________________________________________________________ Sign-up for Ads Free at Mail.com http://promo.mail.com/adsfreejump.htm