Best of the blogs: Jon Udell discusses public radio on the Web, such as a mashup that organizes radio stories by location. Security Adviser Roger Grimes points out that HIPPA has no teeth. Why? Because despite the fact that more than 19,000 complaints/violations have been filed since it went into effect, no fines have come about. “Like the non-successful prosecutions of SOX violators, it tells corporate America that it’s cheaper to not meet the guidelines.” Open source: Ubuntu ventures into enterprise Linux via Ubuntu 6.06 LTS, as in Long Term Support, that is tailored to be a datacenter-class alternative to Red Hat and Novell. Walking the tightrope between enterprise and open source, however, is never easy. And it probably doesn’t help Ubuntu’s cause that Red Hat officially complete its JBoss acquisition. Special report: From hundreds of entries we chose the top leaders in IT management and innovation: The 2006 InfoWorld CTO 25 winners. The list includes Suzanne Peck, who is in charge of IT for the District of Columbia, AT&T’s John Stankey, and Bob DeRodes of The Home Depot — plus 22 others. The news beat: IBM CEO Sam Palmisano plans to brief analysts on Big Blue’s India game plan. Apple, meanwhile, is no longer in that event as it shuts down its Indian support center and lays off all employees there after only one month of operation. Yahoo’s CEO Terry Semel will receive a salary of just $1 for the remainder of 2006 and through 2008, but will be eligible for an annual bonus of up to 1 million stock options. And Acer’s chairman says the PC industry will rebound after June. Technology Industry