Quoteworthy: Don’t go half-way on open source … Eventually, unless you go open, you’ll go under. Sorry about that. It’s one of those harsh realities. — Matt Asay. Open source and the living dead.New to our site: We’ve added another blog, Geeks in Paradise, spearheaded by Brian Chee, who founded the Univ. of Hawaii School of Ocean and Earth Sciences and Technology’s Advanced Network Computing Laboratory (SOEST ANCL). Mr. Chee will share tales and tips from ongoing hands-on tests and explore myriad other technology topics. Columnists’ corner: How do you investigate potentially malicious Web page code without infecting yourself? Roger Grimes opens this week’s installment of Security Adviser with that very question. “Of course, when analyzing malware, the investigator should use appropriate caution. But any of the methods beats clicking on the malicious link or content in IE and hoping nothing happens,” he explains. Open source: Dell says that 25 percent of its enterprise market is Linux, points out Dave Rosenberg in Open Sources. And OpenVZ solves one networking problem with a new virtual ethernet device. Notes from the field: Hobnobbing with scurvy pirates, the elusive Robert X. Cringely claims to possess no secrets, for now anyway. But that doesn’t mean he’s not suspicious of the DOJ’s request that online services voluntarily store subscriber data for two years minimum. Personally, I suspect Cringe’s real concern is that, much like Baroness Penelope Cat, someone will uncover his fetish for underage mice. Someone such as the Rio Grande Web cam patrol, perhaps. Okay, okay, for that to make any sense whatsoever you need to read Windows Genuine Advantage a poor bet, bank snags domain from pet. Technology Industry