InfoWorld staffer Matt Hines writes that (the other) Internet inventor, Tim Berners-Lee, is weighing in on the mobile Internet. Berners-Lee seemed an unlikely podium-gripper at at Mobile Internet World, where, as Matt Hines relates, MTV and Sprint-Nextel were laying out their plans to capitalize on consumers' demand for Internet in their hands. Er, for the public good, of course. Google, meanwhile, has taken th InfoWorld staffer Matt Hines writes that (the other) Internet inventor, Tim Berners-Lee, is weighing in on the mobile Internet. Berners-Lee seemed an unlikely podium-gripper at at Mobile Internet World, where, as Matt Hines relates, MTV and Sprint-Nextel were laying out their plans to capitalize on consumers’ demand for Internet in their hands. Er, for the public good, of course. Google, meanwhile, has taken the wraps off Android, its Linux-based mobile device platform. Debuting only as a handful of Java tools and a device emulator, Android aims to be the soul of the near-desktop handsets. I wonder how many of us will live long enough to see it implemented in a device. Apple has done it again: The latest release of iTunes “improves” iPhone and iPod Touch devices by re-locking those that have been unlocked by freedom-loving crackers to run on non-AT&T networks and to support native software. Every time Apple seals the latest improvised window into iPhone, more crackers rally ’round the cause and attract more publicity to the battle. Technology Industry