Wireless: Nokia is contributing the source code for Python for S60 cell phones. With the programming language, to be available on SourceForge.net, developers can write and install applications for the S60. Japan’s largest telecommunications group, NTT, plans to start testing WiMax technology as early as next month, with an eye on actual throughput and interference with other services. Security: There are hackers lurking in AMD’s Web site — and they are sabotaging the chipmaker’s tech support site with maliciously encoded WMF images that install unauthorized software on unpatched PCs. Symantec, meanwhile, says in September of this year it will offer a hosted security service akin to Microsoft’s Windows OneCare Live that includes security, PC tuning and backup. Fortinet and Trend Micro settle their patent dispute over antivirus software, and AOL patches a serious Winamp bug. Best of the blogs: Jon Udell takes further adventures in lightweight service composition, continuing his discussion of LibraryLookup while posting and dissecting code. Quoteworthy: My advice to IT is if you don’t already do it, be sure and ask [vendors] for references. And if you are not able to talk to them with a vendor support person hovering over the phone call, think twice before you commit to their product. — Ephraim Schwartz, in Are high-tech firms denying access to their customers? Technology Industry