CNetNews.com reports that “

[i]n a blog posting Sunday, Adobe’s top creative products executive, John Loiacono, made unflattering remarks about open-source alternatives whose free cost is offset by the time that creative pros have to spend fiddling.”  Loiacono points out that “what designers need is tightly-integrated workflows and high reliability right out of the box, so the really important question to ask is what’s the impact to the user.” He concludes that “[o]pen-source software can be a perfect solution. It’s just not right for everything. Or for everyone–like many creative professionals who are on deadline and prefer to innovate vs. integrate.”

InfoWorld writes that “[a]lthough concerns regarding handheld data security still trump fears of mobile viruses, security software vendors and researchers contend that greater numbers of attacks are on the horizon.”

According to the Register, “Google has crossed swords with an independent security researcher who claims that the domain used by Google module applications provides a potential ‘safe haven’ for phishing fraudsters.”

Internetnews.com points out that even though “[w]ireless 4G roll-outs won’t likely start until between 2010 and 2012, and even the International Telecommunication Union’s official definition of the technology won’t be released until 2008 or 2009,”  major players such as Ericsson, Qualcomm and Intel are already “pushing the primary 4G technologies of the future, expected to be Long Term Evolution (LTE), Ultra Mobile Broadband (UMB) and IEEE 802.16m WiMAX.”

Inc.com has a fun article today entitled “What do all entrepreneurs have in common?”