If you need any MAPI, Exhange Integration, IVR, VB scripting, or TTS, then you MUST run on a Windows server. This requires the customer either already have a server, or adds the cost of server OS license if they don't.
Personally, I prefer server2003, because I'm more familiar with it, and also because almost all Avaya's documentation on server apps (VM Pro, CCR, One-X, CS) reference 2003 fairly well, and are comparatively crappy--> non-existent in terms of how to deal with them in 2008.
If you don't need the items listed above (MAPI etc) then the linux appliance server is the way to go. Reliable and no server OS cost.
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