Open source: They won’t be calling to bug you during dinner, but the OSDL and some of its members, including Motorola and PalmSource, are kicking off a new initiative to promote Linux as an OS for cell phones. Best of the blogs: Bloggers and journalists can, in fact, work together, and Jon Udell illustrates how he and a New Hampshire Public Radio editor proved that to be true in covering the recent flooding in Keene, N.H. Matt Asay comes clean about loving Nicholas Carr’s IT philosophies, and weighs in on Carr’s latest concerning Web 2.0, the perceived low barriers to entry, and the flurry of startups hoping to cash in. Dave Linthicum writes that you need to consider keeping some persistence at a central-tier within a service-oriented architecture, and Ed Foster on what constitutes a fair policy on returning a defective KVM. Security: Victor Garza comments in Zero Day that he has not figured out if the massive number 800 — as in how many companies are focusing on security — is good or bad for customers, but he is absolutely certain that he hates to pay for clothes that carry logos on them. (I couldn’t agree more.) Those free T-shirts IT vendors hand out, now that’s a different story altogether. The news beat: Borland bought Legadero for its Tempo IT governance technology. Entrepreneurs in Cordoba, Spain, meanwhile, have developed electrical sightseeing cars equipped with computers that help navigate old-city quarters, display major attractions and even talk to passengers. Technology Industry