Search: In a move that it hopes will do for the enterprise what Google has done for public information, Oracle today introduces the standalone Oracle Secure Enterprise Search 10g. A teenager, meanwhile, claims to have uncovered a hole in Google’s Gmail that could allow hackers to gather e-mail addresses or compromise an account. Open source: Oracle chief Larry Ellison says that open source needs big vendors to thrive and “becomes successful when major industrial corporations invest heavily.” Dave Rosenberg tackles Uptime, Weak Apple customer service and his fifth Treo. Customers can take vendors to task when they fail to deliver uptime as per the contract, but “when my cell phone barely works in downtown San Francisco, or my G5 has its third meltdown in one year, I have no recourse.” Hardware: One more Oracle story for this post. This time, the company joins the Itanium rally with a public show of support for Hewlett-Packard’s Itanium-based servers. More chip companies are rushing to 65-nanometer production, Xilinx being the most recent. Best of the blogs: Bob Lewis clarifies levels of manager ability with a metaphor of three craftsmen and their different approaches to designing, building and, ultimately, profiting from chairs. The news beat: An inaccurate article suggests that China might split itself off from the Internet with a cadre of Chinese-language specific domain names, but more recent reports state that simply is not true, namely a statement from ICANN. March 1 saw the 1,000,000th English article posted on Wikipedia; it’s about the Jordanhill railway station in Scotland. And India becomes a target for spam as malware writers are gunning for specific regions.N.B. We have a new forum for gripes, questions and tips that we call Open Mic. Technology Industry